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Bill Anton
"I do not see myself as
a biographer of the "cowboy." I know some artists feel
they are recording an historical portayal of ranch life today
in the American West. But the focus of my work has always been
mood and passion. If I'm recording anything, I'm recording how
I feel about the West. I want the viewer to feel the drama of
atmosphere and the mystery of a western night. I want the volume
and portent of a cloud to be evident in the calligraphy of a
brush stroke. The pack of the muscle below a horse's shoulder
should be energized by the gestural application of paint.
You see, I love to paint. And
I love the American West. I was born in Chicago, but the Sierra
Nevada, Sangre de Cristo, Sawatch and a hundred other ranges
of our Rocky Mountains were the only "Big Shoulders"
that ever interested me. Walking thunderstorms, sunstruck cedars,
rimrock and artfully abstract water patterns charge the landscape
here with an impossible beauty.
Amidst this nobility is its caretaker:
the rancher. With the natural ease of generations bred to the
saddle, he is a powerful image, further ennobled by a fine horse.
An artist under the spell of the west has the privilege of marshaling
the virtues of landscape, figure and equine painting into one
supremely paintable subject: the American cowboy. TO GOD BE THE
GLORY"
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