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Entz, Loren, oil on canvas, 12" x 10"

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Entz, Loren, oil on canvas, 12  x 10
Entz, Loren, oil on canvas, 12" x 10".Whereas many Western artists focus on either the more adventurous aspects of the historical West or contemporary ranch life, Loren Entz paints the quieter, more domestic side of rural living. His paintings often depict the simple moments that make up the fabric of everyday life such as mothers with their children, or a father holding an infant at the end of the hard day's work.

Raised in a Kansas farming community outside of Newton, and living with his family in Billings, Montana after living in Wyoming, Loren Entz finds inspiration and beauty in people and domestic animals that live close to the land, especially Indians, horses, pioneer women and children. One of his major themes is preserving Indian culture. Like his paintings and drawings of ranch life, his depictions of Native American life often show domestic scenes with parents and children and necessary work being done in the context of events that closely tie family members together because they are doing mutual tasks.

Entz is also carefully selective of subject matter, and often focuses on connections between the shared experiences of Anglos and Native Americans in the West. His emphasis is on the human emotions that unite, rather than divide, the many cultures that make up the past and the present worlds of the West. Although his paintings are frequently narrative in nature, many have their genesis in painting trips in the field. He has said that painting directly from nature allows him a greater degree of spontaneity.Working from his Billings studio in an historic building that he has remodeled, Entz approaches his subjects with first-hand knowledge from his background. He grew up in farm country and visits to the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City fired his artistic imagination and ambition. He later worked as a Montana ranch hand, and coming into contact with other Western artists, Entz soon began to realize it was possible to actually make a living as an artist. While in high school, he nurtured his artistic talent through course work at the Famous Artists Correspondence School and through his studies with two masters of realistic painting, Bettina Steinke and Richard Schmid.

Entz has been a member of the Cowboy Artists of America since 1992. Working in oil, charcoal, pencil, pastel, bronze and watercolor, he has received numerous CAA annual exhibition awards: Silver Medal for Oil Painting in 1994; Silver Award for Drawing and Other Media in 2007, 2005, 1995 and 1993; and Gold Medal for Drawing in 2003 and 1996. Of his affiliation with the Cowboy Artists of America, Entz is quoted in the organizations 2009 exhibition catalogue: "I'm very proud of my association with the CAA. My desire is to steadily grow as an artist and become the best painter and sculptor that I can become."