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Native American Art by Oscar Berninghaus
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ARTISTS WANTED
ART WORK
We
are actively purchasing the following for generous prices:
Harry Adamson Oscar
Berninghaus
Carl Oscar Borg Edward
Borein
Roland Clark John
Clymer
Gerald Delano Joe
DeYong
Maynard Dixon Nick
Eggenhofer
Nicholas Firfires
E.W. Gollings
Frank B. Hoffman
Lynn Bogue Hunt
Will James W.H.D.
Koerner
Sydney Laurence Robert
Lougheed
David Maass Frank
McCarthy
Edgar Payne Ogden
Pleissner
Burt Procter C.M.
Russell
Carl Rungius Conrad
Schwiering
O.C. Seltzer J.H.
Sharp
Frank Stick Donald
Teague
Olaf Wieghorst and
many other artists wanted
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BUY ART |
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Maynard
Dixon
Maynard
Dixon was born in Fresno, CA on Jan. 24, 1875. A sickly
child, sketching occupied a lot of Dixon's time while
growing up. As a boy he listened with fascination to the
stories of the Old West told by the old timers. It is
no wonder that cowboys and Indians were to become the
main subject matter of his life's work. At 16 he sent
his sketch book to Frederic Remington who encouraged him
to pursue an art career. The Dixon family moved to Alameda,
CA in 1893, the year the artist's first illustration was
published in Overland Monthly. Dixon enrolled at the Mark
Hopkins Art Institute, but the confines of a classroom
were not to his liking and he remained only three months.
In
1895 he took his first full-time job as an illustrator
for the San Francisco Morning Call and continued four
years later with the Examiner. By 1899 he was making regular
sketching trips into the Northwest and Southwest, during
which time he was exhibiting regularly with the San Francisco
Art Ass'n. In 1905 he married artist Lillian West Tobey.
A year later the earthquake and fire destroyed his studio
and most of his early works. The Dixons then lived across
the Golden Gate in Sausalito until 1907 when he accepted
a commission from the Southern Pacific Railroad to paint
a mural for their depot in Tucson, AZ. Afterwards he moved
to New York where he continued his magazine illustrations.
Upon returning to California in 1912, he abandoned commercial
art to concentrate on easel paintings and murals. During
the PPIE of 1915 he suffered a nervous breakdown and divorced
his wife in 1917. He married photographer Dorothea Lange
in 1920. This marriage lasted until 1935 and in 1937 he
married artist Edith Hamlin. During the 1930s he did murals
and paintings for the WPA. In 1938 ill health forced his
move to the drier climate of Tucson, AZ where he spent
his last years while maintaining a studio nearby in Mt
Carmel, UT. Dixon died in Tucson on Nov. 14, 1946. Today
he is internationally famous for his western subjects
which he often signed with his logo, an Indian Thunderbird.
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Art work
by Edward Borein (1872 - 1945)
Artist
Biographies
Harry Adamson
Oscar
Berninghaus
Carl
Oscar Borg
Edward
Borein
Roland
Clark
John
Clymer
Gerald
Delano
Joe
DeYong
Maynard
Dixon
Nick
Eggenhofer
Nicholas
Firfires
E.W.
Gollings
Frank
B. Hoffman
Lynn
Bogue Hunt
Will
James
W.H.D.
Koerner
Sydney
Laurence
Robert
Lougheed
David
Maass
Frank
McCarthy
Edgar
Payne
Ogden
Pleissner
Burt
Procter
C.M.
Russell
Carl
Rungius
Conrad
Schwiering
O.C.
Seltzer
J.H.
Sharp
Frank
Stick
Donald
Teague
Olaf
Wieghorst
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