Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Four different sculptures were cast in bronze, starting in 1895, using the sand-casting method. They were The Broncho Buster, The Wounded Bunkie, The Wicked Pony, and The Scalp. In 1900 Remington began working exclusively with the Roman Bronze Works, New York.
We carry a vast array of options, including the Frederic Remington bronze sculptures, giving you a variety of styles from which you can choose. You will find some of Remington’s most popular sculptures in the USA, allowing you to decorate with style and add a touch of class to any room.
The Frederic Remington Art Museum owns examples of fourteen different bronze subjects of the twenty-two that Remington created. Original Remington bronzes vary greatly in numbers of known casts from one to several hundred. Compared to later casts made under direction of the artist’s widow or her estate, casts made during the
More than 275 authorized bronze casts were produced by New York foundries, first by the sand-casting method at Henry-Bonnard Bronze Company, and, beginning in 1900, by lost-wax casting at Roman Bronze Works. Remington went on to model twenty-one sculpture groups, almost all of western subjects.
Discover the Legacy of Bronze Frederic Remington Sculptures. Our curated selection features a variety of Remington's most celebrated works, from dynamic cowboy scenes and galloping horses to heroic Native American figures.
Cast by New York’s Roman Bronze Works foundry in the lost-wax technique, the earliest "Mountain Man" statuettes are sharply delineated with a rich variety of textures, from the fringed buckskin garment to the animal’s hairy coat to the rocklike base.
Remington’s fourth bronze, and his first of a Native American subject, was copyrighted in December 1898 as “The Triumph.” The more common title, “The Scalp,” refers specifically to the lock of hair that the figure, mounted bareback on a horse, holds aloft in his right fist.
Frederic Remington: Sculpting the Old West in Bronze In the world of Western sculpture no artist is more iconic than Frederic Remington. With works like “Coming Through the Rye” and the “Outlaw,” Remington’s gravity defying sculptors have remained popular in the public eye for over a century.
Frederic Remington Art Museum Albert R Newell GallelY Sculpture guide The Frederic Remington Art Museum owns examples of fourteen different bronze subjects of the twenty-two that Remington created. Original Remington bronzes vary greatly in numbers of known casts from one to several hundred.
During his short life, Remington produced more than 3,000 drawings and paintings, 22 bronze sculptures cast in editions, two novels (one of which was adapted to the stage), and more than 100 magazine articles and stories.