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Charles Marion Russell (1864-1926)
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Think that you may own a
painting by Charles Marion Russell? We authenticate, appraise, research and issue certificates of authenticity (COA) and provide consultations for all paintings by Charles Marion Russell. |
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When Blackfoot and Sioux Meet
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Charles Marion Russell
was an American painter and sculptor. Art historians
have called Russell one of the greatest artists of the
American West, and today, his landscapes serve as a
reminder of how vast the west once was. Though he never
had any formal artistic training, Russell’s work was
from the heart and was a product of true American
ambition. |
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Wild Horse Hunters
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He was born into an
upper-class family in St. Louis, MO, and as a young man,
worked as a hunter and trapper, as well as on a sheep
ranch. Russell eventually became a cowboy, and painted
and sketched during his spare time. He would mold small
animal figurines with clay and sketch the livestock that
he watched over as well. |
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Wolf with Bone

Indians Crossing the Plains 1902

When East meets West
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Prior to 1900, Russell
created few watercolor or oil paintings worth noting,
with most of his best work being made during the last
two decades of his life. His subject matter was
generally a reflection of his work as a cowboy, and
featured typical ranch scenes as well as depictions of
Plains Indians. |
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Watercolor, War 1899

Meat for Wild Men

Waiting and Mad
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Russell rose to fame as
an artist the truly American way and is the stuff of
legends. While working as a cattle hand at the O-H Ranch
in the winter of 1886-1887, Russell used his artistic
flair to create his first taste of publicity. Instead of
a regular letter informing the owner that his cattle
survived the winter, the ranch foreman sent the owner a
postcard sized watercolor that Russell had painted,
depicting a skeletal steer being watched by hungry
wolves under a gray sky. This postcard was displayed by
the owner to friends and acquaintances and eventually
ended up in a shop window in Helena, Montana. After
this, work steadily began to stream in for the artistic
ranch hand and thus, his art career was born. |
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Elk in Lake Macdonald

When Horseflesh Comes High

A Doubtful Handshake
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Russell also credited
his success as an artist to his wife Nancy. Russell
married Nancy in 1896, and the couple moved to Great
Falls, Montana the following year. Though he became a
local celebrity in Great Falls and found much success,
it was Nancy that helped Russell to gain a name for
himself on an international level. She set up many
exhibitions of his work all over the United States and
even in London, creating a great following for the ranch
hand turned artists’ work. |
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In the Land of Kootenai

The Horse Thieves

The Judith Basin Roundup
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Some time early in his
career, Russell began to add a buffalo skull to his
paintings as his mark or as a part of his signature. He
would work the buffalo skull into the foreground, and it
was later copyrighted as his logo. Art historians say
that this was his silent way of showing respect to his
Indian friends as a representation for their hardship
and for their loss of the great buffalo; their source of
life and prosperity. |
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Portrait of a Native American “Young Boy” with Buffalo
Skull in lower left corner

Blackfeet Warrior with Skull signature

Buffalo Hunting
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Today, Russell’s
paintings are housed all over the United States,
including his painting “Lewis and Clark Meeting the
Flathead Indians,” which is displayed at the capital
building in Helena, Montana. His paintings sell for
upwards of $5 million dollars at auction, and are in
high demand by collectors. |
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An illustrated letter from Russell to his friend
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Still wondering about a painting of the early American
West in your family collection? Contact us…it could be
by Charles Marion Russell. |
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