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Lot of 2 Fine Art Prints

Currency:USD Category:Firearms & Military Start Price:75.00 USD Estimated At:150.00 - 300.00 USD
Lot of 2 Fine Art Prints
"Bang!" by Kay Homan for the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation Fall 1988, 264/500 signed lower left. Image measures 17 1/2"x12 1/2" in double mat and wood frame. Kay Homan was born in the state of Nebraska where she began to draw before she could talk. She now resides in the small town of Providence in the mountains of northern Utah. She has been featured in numerous publications such as SOUTHWEST ART and ART OF THE WEST, and has won literally a bushel of awards, including the National Park Service’s 75th Anniversary Award. Kay was made the first woman member of the ‘American Indian & Cowboy Artist Association’ in 1982. Primarily working in watercolors the artist paints the subjects of the American west. A full time artist for 35 years, Kay has documented painting and selling over a thousand paintings. For the past five years she has been invited to exhibit at the prestigious Western Art Show held during Canada’s Calgary Stampede, even winning a Gold belt buckle for Best Booth. Logan Fine Art is proud to feature the works of Kay Homan in our gallery. "Buffalo Stand' by Robert Auth 128/250, signed lower right. Image measures 23 1/2"x17 1/2" in wood frame. Both show some warping to paper. Robert Auth was also a natural storyteller. Over a six-decade career as a painter, printmaker, and sculptor, he produced a body of work both wide-ranging in its subject matter and precise in its reverence for historical detail. His lithographs of trappers and frontiersmen, the Nez Perce War of 1877, and scenes from early Idaho airmail fields provide a stirring visual record of little-known stories of the West, combining an illustrator's eye for narrative and a historian's devotion to accuracy. Whatever the medium, from acrylic pop art, to gun engravings, to "cartridge boards" - illustrated, mounted collections of historic bullets and casings - Auth transformed it into a way of telling his story