AUCTION 2018,

LOT 211

Charles Russell

1864-1926

Indian On Horseback

MEDIUM: Oil on canvas

DIMENSIONS: 13 3/4 x 10 1/2 inches

Signed lower left and dated 1898

SOLD FOR: $ 321,750

Including Buyers Premium

Additional Information

Born in St. Louis in 1864 just as the Civil War was coming to a close, young Charlie Russell’s hometown was the gateway to the West, the borderland between “civilization” and the rapidly filling “frontier.” Russell saw people and horses lighting out for the open range and their stories enthralled him. At the same time, his mother’s skill at painting flowers planted the seed that would become a vocation. In his teens, Russell convinced his parents to allow him to head West and try his hand at punching cows. He did so, making a go of it even as he made fast friends among the characters of the Montana Territory’s Judith Basin. Soon, he began to capture cowboy life in art, in watercolor at first, then in oil, and, lastly, in bronze. Russell’s work was being published regularly in Harper’s Weekly and had been acclaimed as original, fresh and real even before he married Nancy Cooper in 1896. Nancy took responsibility for the business end of Russell’s art and proved to be a tough, shrewd agent for her husband. Russell’s devotion, not only to his West, but to what he called “The West that has passed” led to some of Western art’s most celebrated and prized works in oil, watercolor, and bronze.
Noted scholar Fred Renner says in his book on Russell works that were owned in 1966, at the time of publication, by the Amon Carter, the Indians in Indian on Horseback appear to be Cree Scouts.
Looking at the work itself, the nearest scout, and the subject of the painting, signals halt to the two scouts who ride behind him. He has pulled up sharply on the reins and his horse has responded by planting its two front hooves. The scout has seen something, suspects something, perhaps merely feels that something is amiss. There might be a faintest hint of a wagon track over the elongated, almost coffin-shaped rock at his horse’s feet. What will happen next is the true subject of the picture, the thing that keeps us guessing, and looking.

CONTACT US

Email: info@scottsdaleartauction.com
Phone: (480) 945-0225

DISCLAIMER

Please note that the first unframed photo is most accurate for color. Framed photographs are to show the frame and are not color corrected to the painting.

*The Condition Reports are for guidance only and should not be relied upon as statements of fact, and do not constitute a representation, warranty, or assumption of liability by Scottsdale Art Auction. Scottsdale Art Auction strongly encourages in-person inspection of items by the bidder. All lots offered are sold “AS IS”. Please refer to item two in our terms and conditions for further information.