Lonely Ride - newest Signed and Numbered Limited Edition Print by Joe Grandee - 17" x 27"

$125.00
#SN.4721334
Lonely Ride - newest Signed and Numbered Limited Edition Print by Joe Grandee - 17" x 27", Lonely Ride is a signed and numbered limited edition print by Joe Grandee It depicts a cowboy on.
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Product code: Lonely Ride - newest Signed and Numbered Limited Edition Print by Joe Grandee - 17" x 27"

newest Lonely Ride is a signed and numbered limited edition print by Joe Grandee. It depicts a cowboy on his horse near a stream in autumn.

The image size is 17" x 27". Overall size is 21.5" x 31". It was published by Somerset House in 1982 in an edition size of 1,500.

About the Artist:

Born a third-generation Texan in Dallas in 1929, artist Joe Ruiz Grandee has a background as colorful as his paintings. His great-grandfather, a Castillian nobleman, came from Spain to settle in Corpus Christi, where he built the town's largest and most successful dance hall and saloon. Grandee's grandfather, Banito, grew up in the family's large home - a home that would ultimately be renovated and designated a historical landmark - and rose to become one of Corpus Christi's most prominent and respected citizens. On his mothers side, Grandee boasted two grandfathers with connections to history; one who captained a clipper ship that ran the blockade for the Confederacy between Port Lavaca, Texas, and New Orleans, and another who was a judge and presided during the famous Sutton-Taylor feud trial.

Grandee studied at the Aunspaugh Art School in Dallas for a short time in 1947 and began painting scenes of the American West in 1948. He didn't particularly like the academic study of art, preferring instead to hone his craft by continually putting brush to canvas, starting first by painting landscapes, then inserting subjects such as cowboys, horses, and cattle. His small east Texas ranch served as setting for many of his early works, and it was there that Grandee decided he would paint things he knew firsthand. He became a practicing professional painter in 1958, dedicated himself to Western art, a relatively new medium at the time. "We live in a universe governed by laws of cause and effect, and a moment of action frozen in time can only be understood in the light of what had transpired before and what is likely to have taken place afterward. The whole scope of time must be reflected. If the action doesn't seem logical, then the story of a painting falls apart," believes Grandee.

Over many years, Grandee has produced many of the most stunning and historically accurate paintings ever created.

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