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Charles Marion Russell
Nig & Coalie, Antique Horse Bronze Sculpture on Wood Base, Western Art

1971

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Touching Leaves Woman, 1988, Bronze Sculpture by Paul Oestreicher
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Artist: Paul Oestreicher, American Title: Touching Leaves Woman Year: 1988 Medium: Bronze Sculpture with Patina, signature and date inscribed Edition: 2/12 Size: 15 in. x 11 in. (38....
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The Athlete and his Coach
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This artwork Titled "The Athlete and his Coach" is a bronze sculpture by noted California artist Kenneth Johnson, born 1945. The size, base not included is...
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Lions and Deer, Bronze Sculpture by A. Ganso
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Artist: A. Ganso Title: Lions and Deer Year: 1973 Medium: Bronze Sculpture, signature inscribed Size: 23 x 15 x 13 inches (58.5 x 38 x 33 cm)
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Buffalo or Bison in bronze by Charles Rumsey
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Preparing to Ride
Located in Missouri, MO
Preparing to Ride By. George B. Marks (American, 1923-1983) Signed and Dated Throughout his artistic career, George Marks’s work was always guided by the...
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[Morgan Le Fey]
By Hazel Brill Jackson
Located in Boston, MA
Signed on base: "Hazel Brill Jackson". Also with artist's monogram. In fine condition. Hazel Brill Jackson (Born December 15, 1894, in Philadelphia) spent most of her early childhood in Italy. Attending the Scuola Rosatti in Florence, Jackson enjoyed afternoons at the zoo, pursuing her favorite pastime: drawing animals. World War I forced the return of the Jackson family to the United States where they settled in Boston. Hazel spent the next four years at the Boston Museum School, where she studied with Bela Pratt and Charles Grafly. Jackson returned to Rome after the war, where she worked with Angelo Zanelli and later had her own studio. With such works as Roman Work Horse and Ned (Mussolini's favorite jumper), she began to exhibit both in Rome and Florence, and eventually became a member of the Circolo Artistico di Roma. The sculptress returned to the United States in 1935 and opened a studio in Newburgh, New York. She continued to sculpt animals, concentrating on horse and dog portraits. Jackson had one-woman shows at the Guild of Boston Artists in 1938 and in 1968. In 1945, she was awarded the Ellin P. Speyer Prize by the National Academy of Design in New York City for Play-Day and Romance (a mare and foal group) and in 1949, she won the same prize for Indian Antelope. Hazel Jackson is represented in the Brookgreen Gardens collection by The Listeners, a sculpture group of raccoons, which was placed there in 1964. Don Quixote, now at Wellesley College won Jackson the Mahonri Young...
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