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Item Ships From: Texas
EDWARD BOHLIN 1920s-1930s SILVER ART PARADE SADDLE HOLLYWOOD WESTERN ARTIST VAIL
By Edward H. Bohlin
Located in San Antonio, TX
Circa Late 1920s - Early 1930s. It is all Bohlin made and marked to include the saddle, the headstall and the breast collar. All made in Hollywood California. The only non-Bohlin item is the bit which appears to also be early California. There is some interesting provenance of the fine saddle. It was commissioned by Charles R. Bell, married to Margaret Vail Bell who was the daughter of Walter Vail. On the Bolin nameplate it has engraved, Vail Ranch as well as made for Charles Bell. Charles Bell Died in 1939.
The Vail Ranch has some great Western History which I will go into a little detail. You see, not only am I selling Saddles, but I’m also selling History.
If you want to skip the history lesson you can just scroll down past the following info to images of the saddle.
It’s no secret that ranching runs in the family blood. There is no greater example of that than California Rangeland Trust CEO Nita Vail. On April 14, 2018 Nita had the opportunity to witness her great-grandfather Walter L. Vail’s induction into the Hall of Great Westerners at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum. This high honor is bestowed by the Museum to “exceptional individuals who have made an indelible impact upon the history of the great West.” A pivotal figure in early California and Arizona ranching, Walter Vail joins just over only 200 individuals who have been inducted into this esteemed hall.
The Vail legacy of advocacy and ranching lives on strongly through his descendants, including Nita.
All these years later, Nita carries the mantle of advocacy for ranchers in her own work at the California Rangeland Trust. Reflecting on her great-grandfather’s induction ceremony in Oklahoma, Nita says, “Witnessing my great-grandfather’s induction with family and friends was an incredible experience and a reminder of why I do what I do. Ranching plays an integral role in the culture, economy, and quality of life in California. Generations later, I get to honor Walter L. Vail’s legacy in my work with the California Rangeland Trust every day, preserving those open spaces for new generations and partnering with ranchers to continue to sustain life on the range in California.”
Walter Vail History
A native of Liverpool, Nova Scotia, Walter Vail purchased the 160-acre Empire Ranch southeast of Tucson, Arizona in 1876, along with an Englishman named Herbert Hislop. In 1882, the Empire Land & Cattle Company was formed with Walter L. Vail as principal shareholder. Over the years Vail, along with various partners, expanded the original land holdings to include over one million acres. The year after Walter purchased the Empire Ranch, the Southern Pacific Railroad built a railroad line, which was great news for the Vail family as it provided a means for them to ship their cattle.
Edward L. Vail, George Scholefield and Bird at the mouth of Rosemont Canyon ca. 1896-1898
Standing Up for Ranchers
In the fall of 1889, the Southern Pacific Railroad announced they would raise cattle freight rates by 25 percent. They ignored loud protests from ranchers who had already been hit hard by depressed cattle prices. In response, the Vails made a plan to drive the cattle overland themselves without the railroad. They knew that, if they were successful, they could break the railroad’s monopoly on the ranchers and force prices down.
Walter’s brother Edward Vail and foreman Tom Turner volunteered to drive the almost 1,000 steers on the 300-mile trip to the Warner Ranch in San Diego. The journey ahead would be grueling. Most of their trip was through desert with water sources 15 to 30 miles apart.
The ranchers would face a slew of obstacles—a stampede, a chaotic Colorado River crossing, an encounter with a group of horse thieves. In spite of all the dangers and challenges, they reached their destination. Just 71 days after leaving Arizona, the Empire cowboys arrived at the Warner Ranch. They had only lost 30 steers.
The historic Empire Ranch Trail Drive of 1890 inspired other Arizona ranchers to make similar drives as a stand against the railroad. That fall, a group of Arizona cattlemen met and agreed to fund improvements to establish a safe cattle trail from Tucson to California.
In response to the united stand of the ranchers, sparked by the Vails, the railroad finally agreed to restore the old freight rate—on the condition that the cattlemen would make no more cattle drives.
Walter Vail led by example, but he was also an active representative of ranching interests in the legislature. He served in the 10th Arizona Territorial Legislature in 1878 and in 1884 on the Pima County Board of Supervisors. He introduced two significant bills: One proposing the creation of Apache County in the northeastern corner or Arizona Territory, and the other calling for the repeal and replacement of a Pima County fencing ordinance. Elected to the Arizona Stock Growers Association in 1884, Walter L. Vail advocated for levying fines on outfits that brought diseased cattle into the Territory, proposed a system of recording brands and earmarks, and requested the establishment of the livestock sanitary commission to oversee quarantines on infectious diseases, and tighter trespass laws.
Moving to California
In the late 1880s when a long drought hit Arizona, the Vails began leasing California pastures and shipping increased numbers of their cattle there to fatten. This marked the beginning of Walter’s efforts to purchase land in Temecula Valley.
Vaqueros (Mexican cowboys) at the Empire Ranch in Arizona
In 1890, with growing corporate holdings in California, Walter Vail established his headquarters in downtown Los Angeles and moved his family there. By this time, he had pieced together four Mexican land grants—Pauba Rancho, Santa Rosa Rancho, Temecula Rancho and Little Temecula Rancho—to form the Pauba Ranch. Eventually, the Vails would own more than 87,500 acres surrounding the little town of Temecula. In 1892 they leased Catalina Island and in 1901-1902 in partnership with J. V. Vickers, they purchased most of the interests in Santa Rosa from the estate of A.P. More. In March of 1894, Vail and Gates joined Vickers in setting up a third cattle company, the Panhandle Pasture Company, with the hopes of expanding new markets in the east. The Panhandle Pasture Company bought seven thousand acres of grassland in Sherman County, Texas, and an equal amount across the line in Beaver County, Indian Territory (later Oklahoma).
Walter Vail was tragically killed in a Los Angeles streetcar accident in 1906. After his death, the Empire Land & Cattle Company (later renamed the Vail Company) assumed control of all his ranches and other real estate holdings. Walter had five sons and they would all have a hand in running the various ranches and the Vail Company as whole throughout their lives. The Empire Ranch in Arizona was sold in 1928. The Temecula area ranches continued to operate until it was sold in 1965. Santa Rosa Island, the last of Walter Vail’s holdings, was sold to the National Park Service in 1986, and ranching operations shut down there in 1998.
Walter Lennox Vail (May 13, 1852 - December 2, 1906) was an American businessman, cattle dealer, and politician. He is known for his Empire Land & Cattle Company (later the Vail Company), which spanned over one million acres throughout five states.[1] Vail has been called "a pivotal figure in early California and Arizona ranching."
Early life
Vail was born in Liverpool, Nova Scotia on May 13, 1852, to Mahlon Vail, Sr. and Eliza Vail.
Career
Empire Ranch
The headquarters of the Empire Ranch in the modern day
Vail left his family's Plainfield, New Jersey house in the middle of 1875 to pursue riches in the West. He worked for a few months in Virginia City, Nevada as a mine's timekeeper, but in November he wrote of his intention to get involved in Arizona's sheep business. He, along with an Englishman named Herbert R. Hislop, then purchased the Empire Ranch along with its 612 cattle on August 22, 1876. The purchase from Edward Nye Fish and Simon Silverberg cost $1,174 at the time and was only 0.25 square miles (0.65 km2). Vail had met Hislop for the first time in August of that year, at the Lick House in San Francisco. Vail also became the main shareholder of the Empire Land & Cattle Company, which was formed in 1882.
Politics
Vail additionally served in the House of Representatives on the 10th Arizona Territorial Legislature for two years, starting in 1879. He was one of five representatives from Pima County. There, he proposed the creation of Apache County in the northeast. In 1884, Vail was elected to the Arizona Stock Growers Association, where he introduced many laws relating to cattle farming.
California
Vail moved his main operations to California in the late 1880s due to a long drought in Arizona. He started leasing Californian land mainly in Temecula Valley, but established his headquarters in downtown Los Angeles. By this time, he had already bought four ranches: the northern half of Rancho Little Temecula, Rancho Pauba, Rancho Santa Rosa, and Rancho Temecula. Later, Vail would own over 135 square miles (350 km2) surrounding the city of Temecula. He also leased Santa Catalina Island and Purchased Santa Rosa Island in 1892 and 1901, respectively. Vail, along with Carroll W. Gates and J.V. Vickers, set up the Panhandle Pasture Company, which bought about 22 square miles (57 km2) in Sherman County, Texas and Beaver County, Oklahoma.
Personal life
Vail married Margaret "Maggie"[a] Newhall in 1881, with them having five children: Nathan Russel, Mahlon, Mary, Walter Lennox Jr., and William Banning (who used his middle name) together.
In 1890, a Gila monster bit Vail on his middle finger, and for years thereafter he experienced bleeding and swelling in his throat, which was thought to be caused by the venom from the bite.
Death
Vail died at 54 on December 2, 1906, due to complications from a tram (Trolley Car) accident in Los Angeles. He was cremated, then buried at the Hollywood Forever Cemetery on December 6.
Legacy
Vail's sons took over the company after his death, renaming it to the Vail Company. The Empire Ranch was sold in 1928, and the Temecula ranches were bought by a syndicate of companies, including Kaiser Aluminum, Kaiser Industries, and Macco Realties in 1965. Santa Rosa Island was acquired by the National Park Service in 1986, and ranching ceased in 1998.
Vail was inducted into the Hall of Great Westerners at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in 2018.[2] Various properties have been named after the Vail family including: Vail Headquarters, an outdoor shopping mall, Vail Lake, and Vail, Arizona.
In 1867, German immigrant, Louis Wolf, and his Chumash wife, Ramona, built a small adobe trading post next to Temecula Creek. Their Wolf Store helped launch the Temecula community, serving as a saloon, livery stable, legal services, hotel, general store, stagecoach stop, post office, school and employment agency. After Louis and Ramona’s deaths, their land and other Ranchos were purchased by Arizona cattle baron Walter Vail. By 1905, the 87,000-acre Vail Ranch became one of the largest cattle operations in California, stretching from Camp Pendleton to Vail Lake to Murrieta. It operated through the late 1970’s when it was sold to build Temecula’s housing. Some of the ranch’s oldest buildings survived in a cluster around the long-vacant Wolf Store. Together they would wait more than 40 years to be restored and once again become a center for community life in the Temecula Valley.
In 1905 after his death, Wolf’s Temecula was purchased by Arizona cattle baron Walter Vail, along with three other Ranchos totaling 87,500 acres. The sprawling Vail Ranch spread from South of Highway 79 to South of Clinton Keith Road, East to Vail Lake Resort and West to Camp Pendleton and continued operations through the late 1970’s when it was sold for housing subdivisions. The remaining buildings that comprised the Vail Ranch Headquarters, several having been demolished, have sat mostly vacant since then awaiting their restoration and re-use.
John N. Harvey, Edward L. Vail, Walter L. Vail, 1879
Ned Joins the Partnership - May 1879
In May of 1879 Walter’s older brother, Edward Lang Vail, known as Ned, joined the Empire Ranch partnership. He had no ranching experience but quickly learned. The Empire Ranch herds were finally sufficiently developed for sale, and the Empire Ranch found a ready market in the town of Tombstone and its nearby mines. Walter finally had sufficient funds to begin to pay off some of the loans from his Uncle Nathan and Aunt Anna.
North end of the original four rooms of the Empire Ranch House.
Empire Ranch Census Records - 1880
The 1880 U.S. Census documents that eight men were living full time at the Empire: the partners, Walter Vail, John Harvey and Ned Vail; John Randolph Vail, Uncle Nathan and Aunt Anna’s son; John Milton Requa, nephew of Isaac Requa who hired Walter in Virginia City; John Dillon, who was instrumental in locating the Total Wreck Mine; Tomás Lopez, a herder; and Mon Ta, the cook.
Section of Official Map of Pima County by Roskruge 1893.
The Southern Pacific Railroad Arrives in Pantano - April 1880
In 1880 the Southern Pacific Railroad finally reached Tucson and by April it was extended to Pantano, north of the Empire Ranch. The availability of rail transportation was a major boom to the Empire Ranch as it was now possible to sell cattle and beef to markets beyond Southern Arizona. The railroad also increased the availability of goods in Tucson and allowed for much quicker and safer transportation to California and the East.
Empire Ranch land acquisitions are highlighted in red. Courtesy of Dave Tuggle
Land Holdings Expand-1881-1882
Starting in 1881 the land holdings of the Empire Ranch expanded considerably. They acquired Charles and Agnes Paige’s Happy Valley Ranch near the Rincon Mountains in 1881. 1882 saw the addition of Don Alonzo Sanford’s Stock Valley Ranch totaling over twenty-eight square miles of grassland between the Whetstone and Empire Mountains.
Charles Bell Bohlin Saddle. All of the leather has been professionally cleaned and conditioned. All of the sterling has been professionally polished as are all of my saddles.
THE BOHLIN BRAND IS AS ICONIC AS THE FAMED WESTERN STARS that wore it. The late actor Richard Farnsworth sported a recognizable gold steer-head Bohlin buckle...
Category
1930s Realist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Silver
" THE SPIRIT OF TEXAS " HUGE, 84" TALL BRONZE BUCKING BRONCO COWBOY WESTERN
By G. Harvey
Located in San Antonio, TX
G. Harvey (Gerald Harvey Jones)
(1933-2017)
San Antonio, Austin, and Fredericksburg Artist
Image Size: 84 Inches Tall
Medium: Bronze Sculpture
Dated 2006 I can deliver in Texas or o...
Category
Early 2000s Impressionist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"SEER" GESSO CARVED OIL ON WOOD PANEL HOUSTON ARTIST MID CENTURY MODERN
Located in San Antonio, TX
David Adickes
(1927 - present)
Houston Artist
Image Size: 10 x 8
Medium: Gesso, Carved, Oil on Wood Panel
"Seer"
Biography
David Adickes (1927 - present)
Adickes spent most of his professional life teaching, painting, and creating small bronzes. Now mainly known as a creator of giant sculpture, A commission for Houston's Performing Art Center in 1982 marks the beginning of his giant sculpture design. After the 36-foot tall cellist called the Virtuoso in a cubist style, he created a number of abstract works, including a giant cornet for the jazz stage at the 1984 World's Fair in New Orleans, Louisiana. Sculptor David Adickes is known for a major project titled Presidents Park in Williamsburg, Virginia, where he created 42 portraits bust of American presidents. Each sculpture is twenty feet tall, and their size was the subject of much protest and controversy. However, a court ruling allowed them to stay. President of Texas, followed by his 42 statue tribute to United States Presidents. Adickes has degrees in mathematics and physics which serve him well in the engineering of his works. Working on a giant sculpture series which includes the Beatles, and he hopes to end with a 280-foot tall cowboy statue...
Category
20th Century Impressionist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Wood, Gesso, Oil
"MAIDEN'S HONOR" ZUNI BRONZE SCULPTURE
Located in San Antonio, TX
John Bennett
(Born 1952)
Fredericksburg, Texas Artist
Image Size: 14 Tall x 7 x 7
Medium: Bronze Sculpture
"Maiden's Honor" Zuni
John Bennett (Born 1952)
John Bennett was designated ...
Category
20th Century Modern Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
3 Foot LA Hands (Blue) (Ed. /10)
Located in Dallas, TX
Artist: OG Slick
Description: OG Slick 'LA Hands' 3 Foot Tall limited edition blue vinyl hand-cast resin figurine, made in Los Angeles.
Edition Size: 10
Di...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Street Art Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Plastic, Rubber, PVC, Vinyl
$3,840 Sale Price
84% Off
"HORSE TAMER" BRONZE SCULPTURE
Located in San Antonio, TX
John Bennett
(Born 1952)
Fredericksburg, Texas Artist
Image Size: 22 x 37 across x 10
Medium: Bronze
"Horse Tamer"
John Bennett (Born 1952)
John Bennett was designated Texas State Ar...
Category
20th Century Modern Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Rethinking It All
By Deborah Ballard
Located in Dallas, TX
This sculpture is cast and manipulated stone, fiberglass, iron, and casters.
Deborah Ballard is best known for conceiving of figures and groupings of figures who relate to one anoth...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Cast Stone, Iron
Ceremonial Musician, Chiang Mai Temple, Thailand
Located in Dallas, TX
This is a ceremonial musician from the Chiang Mai Temple in Thailand.
Category
1960s Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"FRIDA'S WEDDING" FRIDA KAHLO BRONZE SCULPTURE
Located in San Antonio, TX
John Bennett
(Born 1952)
Fredericksburg, Texas Artist
Image Size: 26 tall x 12 x 8
Medium: Bronze Sculpture
"Frida's Wedding" Frida Kahlo
John Bennett (Born 1952)
John Bennett was de...
Category
20th Century Modern Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
" PROUD AND PROTECTIVE " G. HARVEY BRONZE SCULPTURE HORSES AND COLT
By G. Harvey
Located in San Antonio, TX
G. Harvey (Gerald Harvey Jones)
(1933-2017)
San Antonio, Austin, and Fredericksburg Artist
Image Size: 14 x 14
Medium: Bronze Sculpture
1982
"Proud & Protective"
I am the largest G. ...
Category
1980s Impressionist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"Equos" Bronze Sculpture Lost Wax Method Florence Cesello 10" x 8"
By Matthew James Collins
Located in Houston, TX
"Equos" A small study inspired by Classical equestrian examples, the artist in this piece balances the potential energy within the form of the horse with an emotional calm.
Noun...
Category
2010s Romantic Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"A TEXAS BREED" G. HARVEY SCULPTURE. BRONZE TEXAS LONGHORN SCULPTURE
By G. Harvey
Located in San Antonio, TX
G. Harvey (Gerald Harvey Jones)
(1933-2017)
San Antonio, Austin, and Fredericksburg Artist
Image Size: 8 inches tall
Frame Size: 8 inches across
Medium: Bronze Sculpture
"A Texas Bre...
Category
2010s Impressionist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"Caduceus", James Muir, Monumental Bronze Fountain Sculpture Allegory, Medical
Located in Dallas, TX
"Caduceus", recognized as a universal medical symbol, in this bronze representation by James N. Muir has become an Angel of Healing bringing love and peace to the earth and all of it...
Category
Early 2000s Realist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Pierre Jules Mene Bronze, "Chien Braque a La Feuille"
By Pierre Jules Mêne
Located in Dallas, TX
Pierre Jules Mene (French, 1810-1879)
Chien Braque a la Feuille
Bronze with brown patina
9.5 inches (24 cm) long
5 inches (12.7 cm) high
Inscribed on base: PJ Mene
Condition: ...
Category
1860s Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Pothos Sculpture Lost Wax Bronze Method Florence Cesello 18 x 6 x 6
By Matthew James Collins
Located in Houston, TX
"Pothos is one of the Ancient Greek Erotes dedicated to yearning and desire. He is the son of the West Wind "Zephryos" and "Iris," the rainbow. This is the artist proof of an edit...
Category
2010s Romantic Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"The Enigma of The Egg" Texas/Mexican Artist Studied with Zuniga
By Alberto Saucedo
Located in San Antonio, TX
Alberto Saucedo (Born 1960) Texas Artist (Sculptor/Painter)
21.5 inches tall Medium: Bronze 2016 "The Enigma of The Egg"
Alberto was born in 1960. He was raised in Mexico City.
Alberto Saucedo began his career as self-taught artist who demonstrated at a young age a remarkable talent and passion for art that eventually at seventeen years of age led him to formal studies at Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and later on enrolled at San Diego City College. There he focused on Commercial Art and Interior Design. It was there, where he evolved his unique personal style. It was also at this time that he discovered the work of Master sculptor Francisco Zuñiga and studied sculpture with him. Sculpture subsequently became a major part of Saucedo’s work, and achieved his first real recognition in his field. Saucedo’s training has included a generous study of art history, where he incorporates his sensuous, spiritual and classical techniques, transforming it into a style that becomes evident in his work.
A few Notable Clients:
Bodybuilder/Actor/Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Actress Rita Moreno.
Businessman (Founder of SeaWorld) George Millay.
Mr Gary Lillian Former Vice President Marketing of PepsiCo, Inc. and now President of Javo Beverages in California.
Italian Ambassador to Mexico.
Exhibits
1985 – Arts and Crafts Fair, México City.
1985 – Solo show Casa Pedro Domeq, México City
1988 – 1989 – Una noche de Arte, México City
1995 – Solo show Galeria Dagen Bela, San Antonio, TX
1996 – Introspecciones (KVDA Channel 60) San Antonio, TX
1996 – Two Artist from Mexico City, Galería Sol y Luna, San
Antonio, TX
1996 – Expo-Formalidades, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de
México (UNAM), México City.
1998 Jamboree, San Antonio Art League Museum, San
Antonio, TX
1999 – Group Show, Galería 10/10, México City.
Publications:
1985 – Prepara muestra Alberto Saucedo, Excelsior, México
1989 – Revista Impacto. Alberto Saucedo escultor de
raigambre prehispánica.
1994 – Southwest Art Magazine, April
1996 – Architectural Digest, Rita Moreno, April pg 204 also
view letters August issue, 1996.
1996 – Mural’s wedding. San Antonio Express News
1999 – Oblate Virgin winning admirers. San Antonio Express
News.
2004 – The Hill Country Edge. Art on the Edge, Alberto
Saucedo. October and December magazines.
2007 – Explore Magazine. Alberto Saucedo a master in many
mediums. October.
2008 – The Sun News Paper. Wild Flower Wonderlands Butterfly
granite sculpture. April.
2002 – “Contemporary Chicana and Chicano Art Vol.2,
Bilingual Press. Arizona State University.
2005 – Triumph of Our Communities. Four Decades of Mexican
American Art. Bilingual Press. Arizona State University.
Commissions:
1989 – Life size sculpture of “Sitting woman” for a private
collection. Bronze .
1996 – Commission to paint outside mural “Humanity in its
Cosmos”. Wildwood Management Group
Building. San Antonio, TX
1999 – Commission of the “Virgin of Guadalupe” for the Oblate
School of Theology. San Antonio. TX
2002 – Commission for a life size sculpture in black
granite. Private collection. Kerrville, TX.
2005 – 21 Plaques of the U.S. Mexican American War (1847).
Port Isabel, TX.
2006 – Commission for a granite Baptismal Fountain, St Joseph
Catholic Church, Spring Branch, TX
2007 – 2012, Six Plaques for the U.S. Air Force Academy,
USAFA, Co.
2007 – 8’ Granite Butterfly Sculpture for Our Lady of the
Rosary Cemetery, Georgetown, TX.
2008 – Murals for “El Chaparral” Restaurant, San Antonio,
TX.
2007 – 2012 Over 80 portrait plaques, including Littlefield
plaque at The Littlefield Stadium, UT, Austin, TX.
Admiral Benjamin Hacker and George Millay (Founder of Sea World).
Main plaques for the:
Central Security Service of the United States
National Security Agency
(NSA).
Air force ISR Agency
Joint Information Operation. Warfare Command.
United States Cyber Command.
2014 – “The Olive Tree”. First Presbyterian Church. San
Antonio, TX.
Sitting Woman
Please view my 1stdibs store front for other Great Vintage Texas...
Category
2010s Impressionist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Head of a man done by Werkstatte Hagenauer Wien
By Werkstätte Hagenauer Wien
Located in Houston, TX
Sculpture of male head, silvered plated brass.
Inscribed on the bottom, "Werkstätte Hagenauer Wien"
Austria, c. 1930s
16"h x 10.5"w x 3.5"d
Category
1930s Art Deco Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Brass
Cloud
By Anita Huffington
Located in Dallas, TX
The alabaster of "Cloud," upon which this bronze is based, is in the collection of the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas.
Anita Huffington's work is also included in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York; the Morris Museum in Augusta, Georgia; the Arkansas Arts Center in Little Rock; and the Samuel P. Harn Museum of Art at the University of Florida in Gainesville.
Anita Huffington's history includes a long period in New York City starting in the late fifties when she studied dance with Martha Graham and Merce Cunningham. Huffington became acquainted with a circle of artists of the New York School, including Kline and de Kooning, as well as a diverse and individualistic group of painters, sculptors, musicians, and poets in this vital and idealistic period. These experiences, and her later choice to live in the woods of the Arkansas Ozarks, sowed the seeds for the sculpture she makes in stone, bronze, wood, and mixed media. Her work reflects both the world of art and the spirit of her life in the woods.
Anita Huffington states:
"I do direct carving in stone and make bronzes, often using the stone as part of the process. My sculpture is usually based on the human form, primarily the female nude. I often carve torsos...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
$36,000
Reflection Series: Inner Voice
By Deborah Ballard
Located in Dallas, TX
The figure has always been Deborah Ballard’s muse in her sculptures. Ballard works in bronze, cast stone, and plaster; her figures ranging from life-size to hand-size. Ballard says, ...
Category
2010s Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Cast Stone, Stainless Steel, Iron
Antoine Louis Barye Bronze Dromadaire Harnaché D'Égypte Camel
By Antoine-Louis Barye
Located in Dallas, TX
ANTOINE-LOUIS BARYE (FRENCH, 1796-1875): A patinated bronze model of Dromadaire harnaché d'Égypte
Signed 'BARYE' and stamped 'BARYE' by the Brame foundry
Raised on naturalistic base...
Category
1870s Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Think II
By Deborah Ballard
Located in Dallas, TX
The figure has always been Deborah Ballard’s muse in her sculptures. Ballard works in bronze, cast stone, and plaster; her figures ranging from life-size to hand-size. Ballard says...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Iron, Stainless Steel
"Protest" Figurative Stone Sculpture
Located in Austin, TX
Figurative sculpture by Duff Browne
Overall Dimensions: 16" x 16" x 4.5"
Dimensions w/o base: 14.25" x 15.25" x 2.5"
Category
Late 20th Century Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Stone
The Girl from Togo Bronze Artist Proof MEAM in Barcelona Spain Figurative
By Matthew James Collins
Located in Houston, TX
The Girl from Togo Bronze Artist Proof MEAM in Barcelona Spain Figurative
This life size bronze bust is the artist proof of "The Girl from Togo." It was personally crafted b...
Category
2010s Romantic Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze, Copper
L'Hiver, Winter, Bronze Sculpture, Lost Wax Method , Romantic, Florence, Italy
By Matthew James Collins
Located in Houston, TX
L'Hiver, which is French for winter. An evocative title which pretty much explains the piece. Number 1 out of a production of Seven.
Artist Statement: I am very happy to announce that two of my bronze works are now available in a limited edition of 7. The first one, shown above, is my vision of Eros. He is more popularly known in the Roman interpretation of a chubby baby or young boy with an bow and arrow. I have always been more intrigued with the original Greek embodiment of the this deity as a young man. More than the god of love, Eros was a personification of the power of creation. He was balanced by his antithesis was Thanatos, that of destruction. In fact, Thanatos is currently in the design process. This work will exist in an edition of 7 and 2 artist's proofs. Each piece is hand chased by myself and I apply the patina as well.
The sculpture was created using the Lost Wax...
Category
2010s Romantic Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
On the Conception of the Hip
By Michael O'Keefe
Located in Dallas, TX
“Everybody has that feeling when they look at a work of art and it’s right, that sudden familiarity, a sort of...recognition, as though they were creating it themselves, as though it...
Category
2010s Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Plaster, Paint
Desiderium Head
By Michael O'Keefe
Located in Dallas, TX
In his sculptures, drawings and paintings, Michael O’Keefe employs unpredictable processes as a means to discover content. He couples accident and chance with unconventional methods, tools, and materials as a means to move beyond the boundaries of his tendencies. In his recent sculptures of heads...
Category
2010s Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Plaster, Pigment
Astarte
By Anita Huffington
Located in Dallas, TX
"The Phoenician goddess of fertility and sexual love, she is also regarded as a moon goddess."
Quote from the monograph "Anita Huffington," Photographs by David Finn...
Category
20th Century Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
$8,000
The Voice From Without
By Deborah Ballard
Located in Dallas, TX
From Memories of Egypt Series.
The figure has always been Deborah Ballard’s muse in her sculptures. Ballard works in bronze, cast stone, and plaster; her figures ranging from life-s...
Category
2010s Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Plaster, Wax, Pigment
Walk Series: Going Places
By Deborah Ballard
Located in Dallas, TX
The figure has always been Deborah Ballard’s muse in her sculptures. Ballard works in bronze, cast stone, and plaster; her figures ranging from life-size to hand-size. Ballard says, ...
Category
2010s Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Iron
Antoine Louis Barye Bronze Panther Seizing A Stag, circa 1860
By Antoine-Louis Barye
Located in Dallas, TX
Antoine-Louis Barye (FRENCH, 1795-1875)
Panthère saisissant un cerf (Panther seizing a stag)
Signed: “BARYE”
Stamped: Susse Fres
bronze, dark-green/black patina
Measures: Height ...
Category
1860s Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Sculpture of female head done by Werkstatte Hagenauer Wien
By Werkstätte Hagenauer Wien
Located in Houston, TX
Sculpture of female head, silvered plated brass.
Inscribed on the bottom, "Werkstätte Hagenauer Wien"
Austria, c. 1930s
16"h x 10.5"w x 3.5"d
Category
1930s Art Deco Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Brass
"Rabbit" Bronze Sculpture
Located in Austin, TX
This exquisite bronze sculpture of a rabbit, created by renowned sculptor Paula Zima, stands at 21 x 13 x 20 inches. Its unique design features ornamental triangle indentations on bo...
Category
2010s Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"Union", Frederick Hart, Bronze Figurative Sculpture, 19x11x7 in., Woman & Man
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
"Union" by Frederick Hart is a figurative female and male figure bronze sculpture with the edition number 299/350.
Inspired by The Creation Sculptures of the Washington National Cathedral...
Category
1990s Realist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"PRAIRIE LEGEND" BISON BUFFALO
Located in San Antonio, TX
Marianne
Texas Artist
Image Size: 9 1/2 " tall by 12 " across
Medium: Bronze
"Prairie Legend"
Category
2010s Impressionist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"Spirita", Frederick Hart, Acrylic Sculpture, 15x14x7 in., 330/350, white
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
"Spirita" Dimensions: 15" x 14" x 7" Medium: Clear Acrylic Resin Edition of 350 Hart wanted to sculpt light, from which forms move in and out, that defined the very delicate sense of...
Category
1980s Realist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Acrylic Polymer
"Ex Nihilo Fragment 3", Frederick Hart, Figurative Bronze Sculpture, 43x31x18 in
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
"Ex Nihilo Fragment 3" by Frederick Hart is a figurative bronze with the edition of 61/65.
I saw Ex Nihilo (Out of Nothingness) as a single expression of creation, as the metamorphosis of divine spirit and energy. The figures emerge from the nothingness of chaos, caught in the moment of eternal transformation — the majesty and mystery of divine force in a state of becoming.
-Frederick Hart
Ex Nihilo, Fragment No.3. Detail from the full-scale plaster for the final stone sculpture of Ex Nihilo, commissioned as part of The Creation Sculptures at Washington National Cathedral...
Category
Early 2000s Realist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Frederick Hart"Ex Nihilo Fragment 3", Frederick Hart, Figurative Bronze Sculpture, 43x31x18 in, 2005
$44,000 Sale Price
20% Off
Antoine Louis Barye Dromadaire D’Algerie Camel
By Antoine-Louis Barye
Located in Dallas, TX
Antoine-Louis Barye
Dromadaire d'Algérie Circa. 1874
First offered in Barye's 1862 catalogue under the title Dromadaire d'Égypte, the present study became known as Dromadaire d'Alg...
Category
1870s Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"IF WISHES WERE HORSES" WESTERN BRONZE SCULPTURE
Located in San Antonio, TX
John Bennett
(Born 1952)
Fredericksburg, Texas Artist
Image Size: 27 tall x 12 x 8
Medium: Bronze Sculpture
"If Wishes Were Horses" Western
John Bennett (Born 1952)
John Bennett was ...
Category
20th Century Modern Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"The Artist's Wife", Frederick Hart, Figurative Bronze Sculpture, 25x21x13 in.
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
"The Artists Wife" by Frederick Hart is a figurative Bronze sculpture bust of Frederick Hart's wife numbered 23/25. His wife blissfully sits with a drapery over her shoulders and loo...
Category
Early 2000s Realist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"Ex Nihilo Figure 4", Frederick Hart, Bronze Sculpture, Figurative Man
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
Don't miss this opportunity to own a piece of history! Ex Nihilo Figure 4, a full-scale plaster from the final stone sculpture of Ex Nihilo, commissioned as part of the Creation Scul...
Category
Early 2000s American Impressionist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Yuri Zatarain Ceramic Abstract Sculpture, Contemporary Mexican Anthropomorphism
Located in Dallas, TX
Early 21st century figurative sculpture with abstract glaze design by contemporary Mexican artist Yuri Zatarain.
Monumental in scale. A very simple and engaging work of art that will...
Category
Mid-20th Century Modern Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Ceramic
"Metamorphosis", Frederick Hart, Figurative Bronze Sculpture, 37x29x7
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
"Metamorphosis" by Frederick Hart is figurative bronze bust of a woman numbered 17/29.
“Metamorphosis” was a journey of transformation for Hart. The work haunted and yet thrilled hi...
Category
Early 2000s Realist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
"Herself", Frederick Hart, Acrylic Female Sculpture, 17x16x6 in., 176/350, white
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
"Herself" by Frederick Hart is an acrylic figurative sculpture of a woman's face numbered 176/350. Hart began to equate light and spirit, the medium itself conveying the meaning, bey...
Category
1980s Realist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Acrylic Polymer
"The Girls" Limestone Caryatid Pair
Located in Austin, TX
By Bob Ragan
Two Indiana Limestone caryatid sculptures
Dimensions and Weight for each: 73" x 21.5" x 20.3", 2000 lbs
About the Artist:
Bob Ragan is...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Limestone
"Adam, Full Scale", Frederick Hart, Bronze Sculpture, Figurative Man
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
Indulge in the beauty of divine creation with Adam by Frederick Hart. This masterpiece, number 2 out of 8, is up for sale and waiting to be cherished by its new owner. This piece is ...
Category
Early 2000s American Impressionist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Louis Ernest Barrias Nature Revealing Herself
By Louis Ernest Barrias
Located in Dallas, TX
Louis Ernest Barrias (French 1841-1905)
Nature Revealing Herself
La Nature se dévoilant devant la Science
Gilt, and silver patinated bronze with blue glass scarab
Signed on base “E...
Category
Early 1900s Art Nouveau Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
David L Deming Centurion II Abstract Modern Sculpture in Flat Black Steel, 1985
Located in Dallas, TX
An astounding abstract sculpture hand crafted by renowned Texas artist David Deming executed in 1985.
It was titled "Centurion II" because of its ominous appearance as a massive guar...
Category
Late 20th Century Post-Modern Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Steel
Mixed Media Sculpture: 'Rhoman Sword'
By Joshua Goode
Located in New York, NY
Inspired by amateur archaeologists such as Heinrich Schliemann who discovered Troy and by past elaborate hoaxes like that of the Piltdown Man, Joshua travels the world performing sta...
Category
2010s Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze, Gold Leaf
"Rebound" David Robinson Charles Barkley Basketball tile Mosaic Black & White
By Jonas Perkins
Located in San Antonio, TX
Jonas Perkins Texas African American Hill Country Artist Image Size: 48 x 42 Frame Size: 55 x 50 Medium: Ceramic Mosaic "Rebound" David Robinson Cha...
Category
1990s Modern Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Mosaic
"Mother & Child", Frederick Hart, Acrylic Sculpture, 24x18x10 in., 43x150, white
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
"Mother and Child" by Frederick Hart is an acrylic figurative sculpture of a woman and her baby numbered 43/150.
Inspired by the birth of his own child, Frederick Hart masterfully ce...
Category
1990s Realist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin, Acrylic Polymer
Agathon Leonard Silvered Bronze Of Marguerite
By Agathon Léonard
Located in Dallas, TX
Agathon Leonard (French, 1841 - 1923) Art Nouveau Silvered Bronze
A French Art Nouveau gilt bronze sculpture, "Marguerite", by Agathon Léonard of Margeruite, placing a flower in her...
Category
1890s Art Nouveau Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Antoine-Louis Barye Petit Fou De Rome Bronze
By Antoine-Louis Barye
Located in Dallas, TX
Antoine-Louis Barye (French, Paris 1795–1875 Paris)
Roman Jester (Petit fou de Rome)
modeled probably circa 1874, executed after 1875
Measure: Height 6.25 inches
Condition: Very go...
Category
1870s Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Leo Laporte Blairsy Art Nouveau Silver Overlay Bronze, 1903
Located in Dallas, TX
L'alsacienne Or Bretonne aux Rameau silver overlay patina by Leo Laporte Blairsy (French, 1867-1923). Depicting a woman in robe holding a garnet of flowers with a L'alsacienne or Bre...
Category
Early 1900s Art Nouveau Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
Harriet Frishmuth 1923 Bronze Of The Vine
Located in Dallas, TX
Harriet Whitney Frishmuth (American, 1880-1980)
The Vine, 1921
Bronze with brown and green patina
Height: 11.5 inches (29.2 cm) high on a 3/4 inches (1.9 cm) high marble base
Inscrib...
Category
1920s Art Deco Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze
That Interim of Purpose
By Michael O'Keefe
Located in Dallas, TX
The sculpture is painted cast plaster.
The dimensions are for the painted cast plaster. The black base dimensions are 2 x 10 x 10 inches.
About this body of work:
“Everybody has that feeling when they look at a work of art and it’s right, that sudden familiarity, a sort of...recognition, as though they were creating it themselves, as though it were being created through them while they look at it or listen to it...” ―William Gaddis, "The Recognitions"
“A great deal of my recent work was made during a time when I was reading the great American novel by William Gaddis, "The Recognitions," the most demanding book I’ve ever read. Along the way, I extracted sentence fragments that interested me and I pieced them together to make the titles for the last three years of my work. So, my recent work is linked to Gaddis’ novel through the titles, but also in the theme of “recognition,” which speaks to the nature of my work. I feel my way through various processes until I recognize a possibility―a possibility that is promising in terms of visual dynamics but also in terms of giving a body to some part of my experience. It is my hope that the viewer is compelled to recognize some part of themselves reflected in the work.” —Michael O’Keefe
Michael O’Keefe earned his MFA from SMU and currently teaches at The O’Keefe Studio Center in Richardson, Texas. This sculpture was included in "Recognitions," his fifth solo exhibition at Valley House...
Category
2010s Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Plaster, Paint
Charles B Fletcher St. Louis Horn Furniture Maker Rare Horn Table Original 1880s
Located in San Antonio, TX
Charles B. Fletcher Has original upholstery
St. Louis Horn Furniture Maker
Rare Horn Table Original upholstery
Top is 20 x 20
Height is 30 inches
Details
Made from Buffalo and Cattle Horns. It is extremely difficult to find Horn Tables. Circa 1880s
Horn Furniture
Biography
Charles B. Fletcher St. Louis Horn Furniture Maker
Charles Fletcher and John Crane, both of St. Louis, made furniture as a business. Makers, such as Wenzel Friedrich...
Category
Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Animal Skin
Arsham Eroded Brillo Box - Blue, Edition of 500 - based on Andy Warhol pop art
By Daniel Arsham
Located in Dallas, TX
Daniel Arsham
Eroded Brillo Box - Blue, Edition of 500
Brand new, unopened box
Daniel Arsham employs elements of architecture, performance, and scul...
Category
2010s Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Resin
Cast metal sculpture of monkey and man: 'Space Monkey'
By Joshua Goode
Located in New York, NY
Inspired by amateur archaeologists such as Heinrich Schliemann who discovered Troy and by past elaborate hoaxes like that of the Piltdown Man, Joshua travels the world performing sta...
Category
2010s Contemporary Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Acrylic
Art Deco Panther Sculpture by D.H. Chiparus
Located in Houston, TX
"PANTHER" Sculpture covered in a cold patina. c.1930
Rests on marble base. Inscribed in script: D. H. Chiparus.
Cold patina was very popular in the Art Deco period. The metal: bronze, spelter, etc. would be covered with chemicals to create the brownish tone. Usually ammonium chlorite and cupric chloride was used to achieve the desirable tone. Since the finish was quite fragile and could wear off...
Category
1930s Art Deco Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Metal
"Ex Nihilo Figure 2", Frederick Hart, Bronze Sculpture, Figurative, Traditional
By Frederick Hart
Located in Dallas, TX
Don't miss this opportunity to own a piece of history! Ex Nihilo Figure 2, a full-scale plaster from the final stone sculpture of Ex Nihilo, commissioned as part of the Creation Scul...
Category
Early 2000s American Impressionist Texas - Figurative Sculptures
Materials
Bronze