The man behind the iconic 'Welcome to Utah' and 'Asteroid City'


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • David Meikle, a Utah artist, is the man behind iconic landscape paintings statewide.
  • His art also appeared in Wes Anderson's film "Asteroid City."
  • Meikle, also an art director at the University of Utah, likes to add distance and finds emotion in his art.

SALT LAKE CITY — Millions of people have seen his artwork — every time they drive into Utah, fly into Salt Lake City or watch a particular Wes Anderson movie — but likely few know his name.

It's David Meikle, and many of his paintings are distinctive red rock landscapes of Utah and the Southwest.

Meikle is both a fine artist and an art director (his day job is art director at the University of Utah), so he generally collects elements — mountains, trees, and clouds — with his iPhone and then, back in the studio, arranges them on canvas.

"I think the, you know, official term is artistic license," he said.

He likes to put a sense of distance, looking through layers and layers of mountaintops and decreasing color values, into his work.

"There's a clarity that we have here," he said. "I'm always looking at the mountains at, you know, different times of day and looking at how far I can see and seeing what's going on with the light."

He also finds emotion in his subject.

"When you see a, you know, really beautiful sunset or you see, you know, the light hitting a mountain, you know, in a certain way, you know, it always just kind of grabs me," he said.

He took to art early on. A young Meikle would ask his father to draw a 5-year-old's favorite, a Tyrannosaurusrex, and then, when dad's rendition wasn't up to the boy's standards, draw it himself.

When Meikle was a teenager, his mom hired an after-school art teacher to teach him how to paint with acrylics.

He went on to win Utah's Sterling Scholarship competition in art.

A series of cards inspired by the 1930s WPA artists who designed posters for the national parks caught the attention of the Utah Office of Tourism, which hired him to create seven "Welcome to Utah" signs for the highways leading into the state and one travelers see driving from the Salt Lake City airport.

One of the “Welcome to Utah” signs painted by David Meikle. There are seven signs statewide, all created by Meikle.
One of the “Welcome to Utah” signs painted by David Meikle. There are seven signs statewide, all created by Meikle. (Photo: Utah Department of Transportation)

He created seven simplified images designed to communicate the best of the state while viewed at 80ish miles per hour.

"You kind of get the essence of what the place really is," he said.

Director Wes Anderson saw something in Meikle's art that fit in the retro-futuristic aesthetic of the film "Asteroid City," and hired him to paint elements sprinkled throughout the movie — a billboard, a billboard of a billboard, a painting that shares a scene on a train with Scarlett Johansson, scenery for a play within a documentary within the movie and a movie poster.

A billboard featured in the Wes Anderson film "Asteroid City." Utahn David Meikle painted the image used on this billboard featured in the film.
A billboard featured in the Wes Anderson film "Asteroid City." Utahn David Meikle painted the image used on this billboard featured in the film. (Photo: Focus Features)

They were imagined landscapes, but based on real locations in Utah.

The billboard was based on Zion Canyon. The movie poster includes a piece of Deadhorse Point, reversed.

Meikle said, even after all these years as an artist, he can't just invent his own landscapes.

"I've drawn plenty of trees and clouds and mountains, it just never looks right," he said. "There's something about nature, the way ... it works on its own, you know, the shapes are always so perfect and I can't kind of replicate that."

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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