During a recent exhibitions design class taught by professor Devorah Romanek, curator of exhibits at the Maxwell Museum of Anthropology at The University of New Mexico, the works of two photographers who chronicled life in New Mexico captured the interest of two graduate students. The class projects, online exhibitions by Katie Conley and Paloma Lopez, are now available on the Maxwell website. They highlight the work of American photographers John Collier Jr. and Charles Fletcher Lummis. The Maxwell has been presenting online exhibitions and other content since the beginning of the pandemic shutdown in 2020. Lummis was a writer, editor, journalist, publisher, archaeologist, ethnographer, librarian, museum founder, conservationist, advocate for Native American rights, promoter of the American Southwest, and, of greatest interest here, a photographer, Romanek explained, noting, “Lummis was part of a group of people in the late 19th and early 20th century, who helped bring attention ̶ for better or for worse ̶ to the American Southwest to the rest of America, helped put it on the map, so to speak, as a place of interest, and as a tourist destination.”