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Charles Marion Russell (March 19, 1864 – October 24, 1926), [1] [2] also known as C. M. Russell, Charlie Russell, and "Kid" Russell, was an American artist of the American Old West. He created more than 2,000 paintings of cowboys, Native Americans, and landscapes set in the western United States and in Alberta, Canada , in addition to bronze ...
Charles Hosmer Morse Museum of American Art, Winter Park, Florida Tiffany later based a stained glass window on the painting. The window is also in the Morse Museum's collection. Cobblers at Bouferik Algeria Summer Street in Algiers: Watercolor Otto Toaspern Music: Oil on canvas ca.1892 Stacy Tolman The Etcher [240] Oil on canvas ca.1887-90
Paintings by Charles Marion Russell Image Title When the Land Belonged to God, 1914 For Supremacy, 1895 (Intertribal warfare among the Blackfeet, Crow, and Sioux) The Tenderfoot, 1900 Smoke of a .45 (A shootout at a saloon) Loops and Swift Horses Are Surer than Lead (Cowboys in Montana catch a bear harassing the herd.)
A painting dedicated "To My Brothers" hung for decades in a local lodge that is once again hosting Montana's most famous western artist. C.M. Russell paintings worth millions highlight March in ...
May 1 – The 1893 World's Fair, also known as the World's Columbian Exposition, opens to the public in Chicago, USA, with a Romanesque statue of Columbia overlooking the man-made lake. The first United States commemorative postage stamps are issued for the Exposition. Among other art exhibits are two bronze calves by Anne Marie Carl-Nielsen.
Yeo had four sittings with the King, beginning when Charles was Prince of Wales in June 2021 at Highgrove, and later at Clarence House. The last sitting took place in November 2023 at Clarence House.
‘I don’t promise anything other than what I advertise,’ artist says
The Weber painting shows black slaves, fugitives from the south, being guided through the snow to shelter at the Indiana farm of Levi Coffin and his wife. The family helping the slaves are Quakers. The painting includes two common stereotypes of the Underground Railroad: helpless slaves and their heroic Quaker saviors. [1] Mary Ellen Snodgrass ...