Henry W. Hamilton and Jean Tyree Hamilton\u27s Remington Schuyler\u27s West establishes their friend Remington Schuyler (1884-1955) in the annals of American illustration and introduces his long forgotten work to a new public. This amply illustrated book is a pleasant read for anyone who appreciates popular culture, particularly regarding Western subjects. Organized into three parts, the book opens with the Hamiltons\u27 brief biography of Schuyler (illustrator, writer, associate of the Boy Scout movement, and instructor of illustration). Although written for a general audience, more could have been added here since biographical details round out the picture of Schuyler in the context of his era. Schuyler\u27s writings, interspersed with sk...
Visual history is gaining respect as a portal to the past, and one individual who stands out in depi...
Joy Kasson\u27s study of William Cody as the first modern celebrity, a man who took advantage of eve...
This book, by the editor of the Frederic Remington-Owen Wister letters, is a strangely disappointing...
Henry W. Hamilton and Jean Tyree Hamilton\u27s Remington Schuyler\u27s West establishes their friend...
Novels and histories of the American West have always attracted a large, varied audience. Some reade...
This is--in every meaning of the word-a wonderful book. Historian William H. Goetzmann, the author o...
Here is a sophisticated study of an individual who is both a timeless conventional outlaw and a tim...
Stephen Tatum\u27s study is motivated by two objectives. One is to read Remington\u27s painterly ges...
After much too long a wait, we have now a second volume of Charles M. Russell\u27s inimitable paper...
In 1985, the final year of its travels, the Gund Collection of Western Art was exhibited at the C. M...
In 1979 the Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art, in collaboration with the Univer...
Charles M. Russell: The Storyteller\u27s Art, by shedding light on Russell\u27s ability to create na...
Walter McClintock (1870-1949) is principally known for two books, The Old North Trail; or Life, Lege...
In many ways this is a most useful catalogue. It features six essays by distinguished scholars all i...
WESTERN ART\u27S BIG TENT Western art continues on its own distinctive path: disdained and ignored b...
Visual history is gaining respect as a portal to the past, and one individual who stands out in depi...
Joy Kasson\u27s study of William Cody as the first modern celebrity, a man who took advantage of eve...
This book, by the editor of the Frederic Remington-Owen Wister letters, is a strangely disappointing...
Henry W. Hamilton and Jean Tyree Hamilton\u27s Remington Schuyler\u27s West establishes their friend...
Novels and histories of the American West have always attracted a large, varied audience. Some reade...
This is--in every meaning of the word-a wonderful book. Historian William H. Goetzmann, the author o...
Here is a sophisticated study of an individual who is both a timeless conventional outlaw and a tim...
Stephen Tatum\u27s study is motivated by two objectives. One is to read Remington\u27s painterly ges...
After much too long a wait, we have now a second volume of Charles M. Russell\u27s inimitable paper...
In 1985, the final year of its travels, the Gund Collection of Western Art was exhibited at the C. M...
In 1979 the Thomas Gilcrease Institute of American History and Art, in collaboration with the Univer...
Charles M. Russell: The Storyteller\u27s Art, by shedding light on Russell\u27s ability to create na...
Walter McClintock (1870-1949) is principally known for two books, The Old North Trail; or Life, Lege...
In many ways this is a most useful catalogue. It features six essays by distinguished scholars all i...
WESTERN ART\u27S BIG TENT Western art continues on its own distinctive path: disdained and ignored b...
Visual history is gaining respect as a portal to the past, and one individual who stands out in depi...
Joy Kasson\u27s study of William Cody as the first modern celebrity, a man who took advantage of eve...
This book, by the editor of the Frederic Remington-Owen Wister letters, is a strangely disappointing...