In a small rural town in the high desert of south-central New Mexico, artists Paula Wilson and Mike Lagg are crafting a home where art and nature are woven into every facet of their daily life. A rug is a painting—or a print, or both. A door is a sculpture—so is a bench, a swing, a light switch, a lamp. There are rock stacks, chairs with humanlike spines, hand-printed clothes, mural-scale artworks on canvas (painting, print, and collage all at once), and paintings on the exteriors of time-worn buildings. Bare feet connect to the earth. Insects incite curiosity. Simple wooden bands encircle the artists’ left ring fingers. It is all intertwined.
Wilson, a mixed-media visual artist, and Lagg, a woodworker and sculptor, married in 2022 after 16 years of partnership. They met in the late 1990s, when Wilson was visiting her mom in south-central New Mexico. Several years later, Lagg, a South Dakota native, invited her to move to his adopted home of Carrizozo—an old railroad town with fewer than a thousand residents—where he enjoys the rural calm and a climate that supports being outdoors year-round. Wilson, who lived and worked in New York City at the time, recalls saying, “‘You’re crazy. I’m never going to move out to this tiny town in the middle of the desert.’ And then a year later, that was exactly what I did.” The two live in a modest adobe home with a dirt backyard that is surrounded by slanting reed-grass fencing, bursts of sunflowers, and the green bushy plants of the Southwest—including New Mexico’s state flower, the yucca, which Wilson regularly depicts in her art. On the far side is a building Lagg constructed initially to serve as Wilson’s studio but which today is used for yoga and reflection. Next door is a guest house for friends passing—or, more often, pilgrimaging—through.
Every morning, Wilson and Lagg walk a half mile across railroad tracks to quiet downtown Carrizozo. In 2016, they purchased three ramshackle but expansive hundred-year-old buildings: a former Ford garage, now Wilson’s studio; an old hotel, now Lagg’s, where pigeons fly in and out through an open roof, neither they nor the human occupant disturbed by the company; and a former opera house turned cinema that the couple has revived as a performance space. Once-vacant adjacent lots now include a greenhouse, a glass pit, and Lagg’s outdoor sculptures. The two spend three hours at the studios, making art individually, then walk back home for a late-morning breakfast, returning downtown for the afternoon “shift”; they are both fortified by daily routine.
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Wilson and Lagg walk across railroad tracks to their studio spaces in downtown Carrizozo, New Mexico.