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Hans Kleiber
Pintails and Mallards

1966

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  • Through Wind and Water (Notre Dame Gargoyle)
    By John Taylor Arms
    Located in Fairlawn, OH
    Signed in pencil Edition: 75 Gargoyle Series No. 7 This impression probably printed by David Strang, 1937-38 Sheet: 9 1/4 x 11 1/4" Reference: William Dolan Fletcher, John Tay...
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    1920s American Realist Still-life Prints

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  • Blue Wing
    By Paul H. Winchell
    Located in Fairlawn, OH
    Blue Wing Etching, c. 1940 Signed in the lower right (see photo) Created while the artist was a commercial artist working in Minneapolis, after his tenure o...
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    1940s American Realist Animal Prints

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  • Black Ducks (Marsh Ducks)
    Located in Fairlawn, OH
    Black Ducks (Marsh Ducks) Etching, 1964 Signed in pencil lower right Titled in pencil lower left Edition: 250 Published by Associated American Artist, New York Illustrated: AAA catal...
    Category

    1960s American Realist Animal Prints

    Materials

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  • Early Speed
    By Clarence W. Anderson
    Located in Fairlawn, OH
    Early Speed Lithograph, 1953 Signed lower right Edition 250 Published by Associated American Artists Illustrated: AAA catalog 1953-03 Reference: AAA Index 1187 Condition: The sheet i...
    Category

    1950s American Realist Animal Prints

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  • Action Plus
    By Clarence W. Anderson
    Located in Fairlawn, OH
    Action Plus Lithograph, 1950 Signed lower right (see photo) Titled lower left (see photo) Edition 250 Published by Associated American Artists, New York Illustrated: AAA catalogs 1950-01 and 1950-02 Reference: AAA Index No. 1072 Condition: Excellent Slight aging to paper Image size: 9 1/4 x 14 1/2 inches Sheet size: 12 x 15 7/8 inches Clarence William Anderson Clarence William Anderson (1891–1971), born in Wahoo, Nebraska, and known professionally as C.W. Anderson, was a writer and illustrator of children's books. Anderson had an interest in horses and drawing. When he wasn't out riding horses, he was drawing them, taking great interest in their bone structure and conformation. Anderson started his career by illustrating for other authors, but eventually began developing texts to accompany his realistic and lively black and white drawings. He is best known for his "Billy and Blaze" book series. The adventures of Billy and Blaze revolve around proper care of the horse, while teaching a lesson. Anderson would go to great lengths to give accurate information. He would even go on to write Heads Up, Heels Down as a training tool for young horse lovers. All of the stories Anderson wrote would be based on true stories or people that he knew-only the plots were fictitious. By the end of Anderson's life, he had written and illustrated over thirty-five horse books, and had also created covers for the Saturday Evening Post. Anderson is the namesake for Andy's Summer Playhouse, a youth theater in Wilton, New Hampshire.[1] Anderson also was a member of the Society of American Graphic Artists. Artwork portfolios • All Thoroughbreds, Harper and Brothers Publishers, 1948 – 20 illustrations • Post Parade, Harper and Brothers Publishers, 1949 – 15 illustrations • Turf and Bluegrass, Harper and Brothers Publishers, 1950 and 1952 – 15 illustrations • Grey, Bay, and Chestnut, Harper and Brothers Publishers 1952 and 1955 – 10 illustrations • Colts and Champions, Harper and Brothers Publishers, 1955 and 1956 – 10 illustrations • Accent on Youth, 1958 – 10 illustrations • Bred to Run, 1960 – 12 illustrations • The Look of a Thoroughbred, 1963 – 8 illustrations • Before the Bugle, 1965 - 9 illustrations • The World of Horses, 1965 – 8 illustrations • Fillies and Colts, year unknown – 5 illustrations • Man O'War, Horse of the Century, 1970 – 8 illustrations Works As author and illustrator • And So to Bed...
    Category

    1950s American Realist Animal Prints

    Materials

    Lithograph

  • Before Day Light
    By Paul H. Winchell
    Located in Fairlawn, OH
    Before Day Light Drypoint, c. 1940 Signed lower right (see photo) Titled lower left (see photo) Created while the artist was a commercial artist working in Minneapolis. In the 1930’s...
    Category

    1940s American Realist Animal Prints

    Materials

    Drypoint

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  • A Burro Train, New Mexico
    By Peter Moran
    Located in Middletown, NY
    Etching with aquatint on heavy laid paper, 7 x 9 1/4 inches (172 x 233 mm), full margins. Signed in the plate, lower right image area. Minor corner loss, top right, and a 1/4 inch ed...
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  • Loon
    By Neil Welliver
    Located in New York, NY
    Neil Welliver Loon, 1998 color etching, ed. of 175 29 3/4 x 29 5/8 in. (75.6 x 75.2 cm)
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  • "Boy With Cows, " Original Drypoint Etching signed by John Edward Costigan
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    "Boy With Cows" is an original drypoint etching by John Edward Costigan. It depicts a young boy with three cows standing in a watering hole. The artist si...
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  • Pike III
    By Robert A. Birmelin
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    A fine etching of a Pike Fish. Perfect for the angler or sport fisherman Born in Newark, New Jersey, Robert Birmelin became a professor of fine arts at Queens College in New York, an...
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  • A Burro Train, New Mexico
    By Peter Moran
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    This artwork titled "A Burro Train, New Mexico" 1880 is an original etching on Laid paper by noted British/American artist Peter Moran, 1841-1914. It is signed in the plate as issue. The plate mark (Image) size is 9.15 x 6.5 inches, framed size is 14.75 x 18.75 inches. It is framed in a wooden silver frame, with light grey matting. It is in excellent condition, especially considering the age. I like to mention that example of this particular etching is held in the following museums, including, The Toledo Museum Of Art, Toledo, The British Museum, London and The Smithsonian Museum Of Art, Washington D.C. It was also illustrated in American Art Review, volume #2 1881, page 163. About the artist: The younger brother of Thomas Moran, Peter Moran was a painter-etcher best known for his Romantic sensibility and landscape compositions incorporating animals. The Moran family immigrated to the United States from England in 1844, when Peter was three. He began his artistic career as an apprentice to a lithographic firm and eventually studied painting with his brothers Edward and Thomas. He was influenced by the animal paintings of Rosa Bonheur and Constant Troyon and visited England in 1863 to see those of Edwin Landseer. Moran took up etching in 1874, using that medium to record genre scenes that he observed while traveling in New Mexico and Arizona in 1881 on an ethnographic expedition to study Pueblo Indian culture. He later returned to the Southwest in 1890 as an artist for the Bureau of Indian Affairs. In 1882, Moran joined Henry R. Poore, an artist friend, on a visit to Taos Pueblo where the two were given a room and spent a week watching the activities associated with the harvest. Poore recounted the details of their travels in an article titled "A Harvest with the Taos Indians...
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  • Drawn from the Heart ( 1, 2&3 )
    By Bev Doolittle
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