
Known for his luminescent colors in authentic portrayals of Native Americans and the American West’s iconic landscapes and structures, Tom Gilleon is one of the most revered masters in the Contemporary Western art movement. His sophisticated approach has been described as “magical elegance” by noted writer Patrick Hemingway and compared to the work of Modernists Edward Hopper and Mark Rothko.
As a Walt Disney Imagineer for 25 years, Gilleon worked alongside Disney art legend Herb Ryman and dozens of other world-class artists, architects, and set designers to invent the concepts that became EPCOT Center and Disneyland Paris, Tokyo, Hong Kong, and Shanghai theme parks.
In the early 1980s, Gilleon moved to Montana and began his fine art career. On January 16, 2024, Western Spirit: Scottsdale’s Museum of the West debuted Tom Gilleon’s triumphant 90-painting career retrospective, Inner Light: The Art of Tom Gilleon. Raised by a Scottish-immigrant grandfather and Cherokee grandmother in a Florida home with no electricity, the exhibition begins in the 1940s with 5-year-old Tom drawing with a stick in the sand, then follows his development through art studies to illustrating for NASA’s Apollo moon missions, from painting theme park concepts for Walt Disney Imagineering — which has loaned 12 original oil paintings for the show — to creating fine art on his Montana ranch today. Featuring 90 original works in all, the exhibition also includes works on loan from 24 private collectors and the artist himself, along with Gilleon’s revolutionary new digital paintings.
Gilleon’s works are held in the permanent collections of the Whitney Western Art Museum in Cody, Wyoming; the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma; the C.M. Russell Museum in Great Falls, Montana; the Booth Museum of Western Art in Cartersville, Georgia; the Chicago Museum of Science and Industry; NASA; the United States Air Force; The Walt Disney Company; Universal Studios; and Warner Bros. Studios.



