Richard Van Wagoner
RICHARD S. VAN WAGONER, a clinical audiologist, is the owner of Mountain West Hearing Center in Salt Lake City. He is the author, among other books, of Mormon Polygamy: A History and Sidney Rigdon: a Portrait of Religious Excess. The Mormon History Association recognized the latter work as "the best biography in the field of Mormon History in 1995" while the John Whitmer Historical Society accorded it the "Best Book Award." Mr. Van Wagoner is a member of the board of editors of both Signature Books and the Utah Historical Quarterly and has published extensively on Western American and Mormon histor
Articles
Joseph Smith: “The Gift of Seeing”
Dialogue 15.2 (Summer 1982): 48–68
Van Wagoner and Walker focus on the seer stones that Joseph Smith used in the Book of Mormon translation process.
Saints You Can Sink Your Teeth Into | William G. Hartley, Kindred Saints: The Mormon Immigrant Heritage of Alvin and Kathryn Christensen
With us, someone else’s genealogy ranks right up there with reading the tele phone directory or watching someone else’s home movies. Most Mormon family histories are about as much fun as funerals. Thus, it was…
Read moreMormon Polyandry in Nauvoo
Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 67–83
Van Wagoner defines polyandry as having two or more husbands at the same time. He identifies women who ended up marrying members of the Twelve or Joseph Smith while they were were already married to their own husband
Sarah M. Pratt: The Shaping of an Apostate
I am the wife of Orson Pratt .. . I was formerly a member of the Mormon church. . . . I have not been a believer in the Mormon doctrines for thirty years, and am now…
Read moreThe “Lectures on Faith”: A Case Study in Decanonization
The “Lectures on Faith,” seven 1834-35 lessons on theology and doctrine prepared for the “School of the Elders” in Kirtland, Ohio, were canonized in the 1835 edition of the Doctrine and Covenants by official vote…
Read moreOrson Pratt, Jr.: Gifted Son of an Apostle and an Apostate
The distinction of being the firstborn of Apostle Orson Pratt’s forty five children belonged to his namesake, Orson Pratt, Jr. Unlike Joseph Smith III, Brigham Young, Jr., Joseph F. Smith, Heber J. Grant, John Henry…
Read moreThe Making of a Mormon Myth: The 1844 Transfiguration of Brigham Young
Mormonism, America’s unique religious manifestation, has a remark able past. Nourished on the spectacular, the faith can count heroic martyrs, epic treks, and seemingly supernatural manifestations. Deep in the Mormon psyche is an attraction to prophetic posturing and swagger. In particular, Joseph Smith, Jr., and Brigham Young are icons who have come to dominate the Mormon world like mythical colossuses.
Read moreThe Making of a Mormon Myth: The 1844 Transfiguration of Brigham Young
The brethren testify that brother Brigham Young is brother Joseph’s legal successor. You never heard me say so. I say that I am a good hand to keep the dogs and wolves out of the…
Read moreArtwork

Galileo’s Recantation

Emergence
watercolor, 21 x 29 in., 1975, courtesy the artist

Boy’s World
oil, 24×36 in. 1970, courtesy McKay-Dee Hospital

San Pedro Wharf
watercolor, 22 x 30 in., 1968, courtesy Jim Si m ister

Waiting for the Parade
oil, 4×6 ft., 1982, courtesy Rick Van Wagoner of Snow, Christensen & Martineau

Dawn
watercolor, 8×8 in., 1985, courtesy Bonnie and Denis Phillips

East on Twelth Street
oil, 24×34 in., 1978, courtesy State of Utah

The Organ Bank
oil, 4×6 ft., 1984,courtesy Springville Museum

Abstract, untitled
watercolor, 24 x16 in., 1974 courtesy Dr. Jeff Hill

The Traveler
watercolor, 22 x 28 in., 1973 courtesy the artist

Silvery Moon
watercolor, 38 x 50 in., 1995 courtesy Mark D. Quayle

Trip with Renée
oil, 24x 32 in., 1994, courtesy the artist

The Allele Madonna
oil, 36×48 in., 1994, courtesy the artist

Self Portrait, Self Portrait, Self Portrait
oil, 36 x42 in., 1996, courtesy the artist

Remembering I- 15
oil, 32 x44 in., 1984, courtesy the artist

Enough Is Enough – I Quit
watercolor, 28 x 42 in. 1983, courtesy the artist

Fast Freight
oil, 24 X 34 in., 1983, courtesy the artist

Galileo’s Recantation
