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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 ...
Philadelphia's Cowboy (1908) was Remington's first and only large-scale bronze, and the sculpture is one of the earliest examples of site-specific art in the United States. [56] Remington's Explorers series, depicting older historical events in Western US history, did not fare well with the public or the critics. [57]
Bronze 1926 14" tall. Cowboy in chaps on a horse waving. Tex remarked, "Was done when I was lonesome." In 1937 was the property of Miss Molly Garfield, granddaughter of President Garfield. The Steer Bulldogger Bronze Cowboy Fun Bronze 1926 16" high. A cowboy with one hand held high on a rearing horse. Inscribed "Cowboy Fun."
The Rattlesnake is an equestrian sculpture by American artist Frederic Remington. The bronze sculpture was one of Remington's most popular, after The Broncho Buster, and it has been described as Remington's own favorite sculpture. The work depicts a cowboy riding a horse that is rearing up in fright, twisting away from a rattlesnake on the base ...
america's first cowboy sculptor 1868–1922 this free-spirited son of the west, sensitive to the changing era in which he lived, portrayed the western epic in marble and bronze. our "bucky o'neill" monumental bronze is among his greatest works, and is acclaimed by the critics as one of the finest equestrian monuments in the world.
The Bronze Wrangler is an award presented annually by the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum to honor the top works in Western music, film, television and literature. The awards were first presented in 1961. The Wrangler is a bronze sculpture of a cowboy on horseback, and is designed by artist John Free.