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  2. Charles Marion Russell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Marion_Russell

    Meat for Wild Men, bronze sculpture, depicting a buffalo hunt. Some of Russell's paintings were shown during the credits of the ABC television series How the West Was Won, starring James Arness. James McDowell Sr. of Tulsa, Oklahoma donated 24 volumes of his illustrations to the Western History Collections at the University of Oklahoma in 1997 ...

  3. Clark E. Bronson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clark_E._Bronson

    In 1960, he started working for the Utah Fish and Game Department, illustrating wildlife and big game. [1] In about 1970, he abandoned painting for sculpting. [ 1 ] Later in the 1990s, he began making films of wildlife.

  4. Robert Scriver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Scriver

    In 2008, the University of Calgary Press published "Bronze Inside and Out: a Biographical Memoir of Bob Scriver" written by Mary Scriver, his third wife of four. At least once a year Robert Scriver would call Tom Troy. A wildlife artist living in Cardston Alberta of the southern Alberta region to help him with his mistakes on Anatomical structure!

  5. Arthur Putnam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Putnam

    Arthur Putnam (September 6, 1873 – May 27, 1930) was an American sculptor and animalier [1] who was recognized for his bronze sculptures of wild animals. Some of his artworks are public monuments.

  6. Robert E. Fuller - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_E._Fuller

    Robert E. Fuller (born 1 July 1972) is a British wildlife artist and filmmaker best known for his renditions of British fauna, rendered faithfully in oils, acrylic and bronze. He favours a highly detailed, realistic style and counts the RSPCA and the National Trust among his customers.

  7. Rembrandt Bugatti - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rembrandt_Bugatti

    Rembrandt Bugatti (16 October 1884 – 8 January 1916) was an Italian sculptor, known primarily for his bronze sculptures of wildlife subjects. During World War I, he volunteered for paramedical work at a military hospital in Antwerp, an experience that triggered in Bugatti the onset of depression, aggravated by financial problems, which eventually caused him to commit suicide on 8 January ...