David Yarrow
Standard Framed 54” x 92”
Further images
West Texas - 2025
Most historians consider the Spindletop strike of 1901, at the time the world’s most productive petroleum well ever was found, to be the outset of oil related growth in Texas. This single discovery began a rapid pattern of change in Texas and brought worldwide attention to the state.
The find was unprecedented in its size (worldwide) and ushered in an age of rapid regional development and industrialization that has few parallels in U.S. history. The oil boom was haphazard and chaotic as rural farmland was transformed by the rapid emergence of
localised boom towns. This frenzied era
became known as The Gusher Age. One
can only image the sort of characters
that would frequent the saloons in these
towns.
Old photographs of this era gave me
some material to work from when we
built our own oil boom town in remote
ranch land in west Texas. We knew, for
instance, that the oil derricks were often
extremely close to each other and indeed
the boomtown would be built right next
to them. There was no commute to work.
It was also clear that in the towns in the
1920s horses and cars balanced each
other out; it was too early for the car to
dominate and a cowboy on a horse was
quicker.
The story I wanted to tell here was that it
would be a cowboy on a horse that could
and would react quickest to a gusher.
It is difficult to conceive of how intense
and pressurised the moments after a
big strike would be, but I sense speed of
reaction was key. It’s nice, therefore, that
all four of the horse’s feet are airborne.
