1338

Jim Dick Montana Oil on Canvas Painting

Currency:USD Category:Collectibles / Western Americana Start Price:10.00 USD Estimated At:100.00 - 150.00 USD
Jim Dick Montana Oil on Canvas Painting
A bid placed on our auctions is a legal contract – it cannot be revoked or cancelled for any reason. By registering for our auctions, you grant us permission to waive your right to execute any chargebacks against our company for any reason. Auctions will be sold with and without reserve. If a lot contains a reserve price, it will be clearly noted in the corresponding catalog. All items are sold as is, where is with no guarantees expressed or implied.
ALL SHIPPING IS HANDLED IN HOUSE.
26 1/2" by 30 1/2" framed. Jim Dick (Born 1949) is active/lives in Montana. Jim Dick is known for Photo real landscape, western genre. Jim Dick is a Montana artist in the truest sense in that he is a Montana resident, born and raised by Montana natives. His paintings are of Montana landscapes done in rich oils. Born in Glasgow, Montana during the notorious winter of 1949 to a family of wheat farmers, he learned how to work hard. As a teen he enjoyed experimenting with drawing and painting on his own, but eventually earned a more practical degree in Business and Finance from Fresno Pacific College. After graduation and 2 years of business experience, he went back to his art endeavors and found them most fulfilling. His strong work ethic has served him well as he spends as many hours painting in a day as light will allow. As he worked, he learned from painting with other artists and he read everything he could find concerning oil painting of landscapes. Painting outdoors, though, has been his most valuable teacher. He enjoys the challenge to reproduce true color, value progressions and emotional light variations seen in Creation. All of his paintings begin with a plein-air field study done on location. For over twelve years Jim and his family lived in a small cabin on sixty remote acres of the Tobacco Root Mountains in Madison County. In October of 1992, Jim, Dayle and their two daughters moved to an acreage on Thorpe Road near the Gallatin River. There they have built a log home with a studio.