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Frederic
Remington
1861-1909
BFA
1900
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Whether he was working
in paint, bronze, or prose, Frederic Remington adhered to one basic subject:
the American West. His action-charged realism is typified in a 1907 canvas,
Cavalry Charge on the Southern Plains, in New York's Metropolitan Museum
of Art.
Remington spent
his early twenties working on ranches in Montana and Kansas and, after settling
in New York in 1885, made frequent trips throughout the West and Southwest
collecting impressions of Native American life, cowboy customs, horses and
cattle, and frontier military operations. In the late 1880s, he traveled with
the U.S. Army during the rout of the Apache.
Remington's first
set of illustrations for Harper's Weekly, in 1886, won him instant
recognition. In 1888 he illustrated a series of articles by Theodore Roosevelt
for the Century Magazine, which were published in book form. His illustrations
for Longfellow's Song of Hiawatha helped win the published work great
popularity. From 1905 on Remington also worked for Collier's.
Although he studied
for two years at the Yale School of Fine Arts and more briefly at the Art
Students League in New York, Remington was largely self-taught. From drafting
brief descriptions of his drawings for magazines, Remington soon advanced
to full-length books, of both fact and fiction, always on Western themes.
His first novel, John Ermine of the Yellowstone, published in 1902,
was adapted as a play.
