Humans have been producing self-portraits ever since the first cave artist put brush to rock. Elaine de Kooning Self-Portrait, oil on Masonite, 1946. (Courtesy of The National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution) Open at the Albuquerque Art Museum beginning Saturday, June 12, “Eye to I: Self-Portraits from the National Portrait Gallery” gathers more than 50 works examining the ways American artists have portrayed themselves since the beginning of the last century. Curators have organized the exhibition chronologically by medium (photography, painting, printmaking and works on paper.) ................................................................ With each self-portrait, artists either affirm or rebel against a sense of identity linking eye to “I.” Santa Fe’s Will Wilson (Diné) expands the documentary work of the early 20th century photographer Edward Curtis through the lens of a 21st century Indigenous artist in “How the West Is One,” owned by the Albuquerque Museum. Wilson uses a tintype process to impart an illusion of antiquity to his photographs.