Robert
Lougheed was born in Ontario, Canada in 1910.
He
received his art education at the Ontario College of Art
and at Ecole des Beaux Arts in Montreal and was known
to have studied under DuMond and Cornwell.
The
artist worked as an illustrator for the Toronto Star,
National Geographic, and Reader's Digest. He designed
Mobil's "flying red horse" logo and was commissioned
by the US Post Office to design the six cent buffalo stamp
for the Wildlife Conservation Series. He helped to form
the National Academy of Western Art at the Phoenix Art
Museum in Arizona. He also taught and mentored many of
today's finest wilderness artists.
The
artist was awarded the Western Heritage Award in 1966
and gold medals for painting by the National Cowboy Hall
of Fame in 1969 and 1972. His work can presently be viewed
at the Cowboy Hall of Fame. Robert Lougheed was an easel
painter and always painted as well as taught his pupils
to paint directly from nature. He died in Santa Fe, New
Mexico in 1982.