Blair Buswell AOTW May/June 2024

The year is 1841, and the sounds of men and animals fill the streets of what would one day become Omaha, Nebraska, as the first serious group of pioneers sets out along the Oregon Trail. From high atop a rearing horse, a wagon master calls to the party of covered wagons, urging the travelers through a dry creek bed and toward a new life out West.

This is not a scene from a new Taylor Sheridan television series; it’s a six-block-long monumental installation in downtown Omaha, something Utah-based sculptor Blair Buswell has been contributing to for the past 20 years. “I’m very proud of what my partners and I came up with,” he says, adding that he collaborated on the award-winning installation with fellow sculptors Ed Fraughton and Kent Ullberg, as well as the late, renowned landscape architect Jim Reeves. “Being part of this team has been a super experience.”

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