

Private residences within Montage Big Sky's Spanish Peaks setting. Works chosen to live with the owners — scaled to stone, timber, glass, and the long alpine view, but quiet enough for the rooms of daily life.
Works were chosen for texture, restraint, and a grounded sense of place. Not a literal Western narrative, but collections attuned to Montana's winter light, material weight, and outdoor life — fire, snow, wood, stone, and the view beyond the glass.
Each room was given its own center of gravity — larger works anchoring the gathering spaces, quieter pieces held for bedrooms, dens, and passage.
Across the residences, the shared rooms work as gathering spaces — sunlit lounges, taller entertaining rooms, fireside galleries — each with its own pace. The art moves between tonal Western imagery, expansive landscape, and restrained abstraction: a sepia triptych above one sectional, a long horizontal piece pacing a corridor lounge, an equestrian work in a darker game room.



Rooms built for use: coffee before first tracks, long dinners, holiday tables, friends moving between kitchen and view. The artwork here needed to be present but easy to live with — pieces read in passing, then again across a table.



Guest rooms were treated as fully considered, not secondary. Landscape and abstraction in balance — one speaking directly to the mountain setting, the other softening the room with pattern, gesture, and layered color.

