Frederic Remington (1861-1909)
Frederic Remington (1861-1909)

'The Broncho Buster'

Details
Frederic Remington (1861-1909)
'The Broncho Buster'
inscribed 'Frederic Remington' and 'CAST BY THE HENRY-BONNARD BRONZE CO N-Y 1895.' (on the base)--inscribed 'COPYRIGHTED 1895./by Frederic Remington.' (along the base)--stamped 'RR 19' (under the base)
bronze with brown patina
23¾ in. (60.3 cm.) high
Provenance
Mrs. G. Kimpton.
Newhouse Galleries, New York, acquired from the above, 1969.
J.N. Bartfield Galleries, Inc., New York, acquired from the above.
Shearson Lehman Hutton Collection, acquired from the above, 1988.
Acquired by the present owner from the above, 1991.
Literature
B. Wear, The 2nd Bronze World of Frederic Remington, Upper Montclair, New Jersey, 1976, p. 180, another example illustrated.
M.E. Shapiro, Cast and Recast: The Sculpture of Frederic Remington, Washington, D.C., 1981, p. 93.
M.D. Greenbaum, Icons of the West: Frederic Remington's Sculpture, Ogdensburg, New York, 1996, pp. 51-64, 171, another example illustrated.
Exhibited
New Orleans, Louisiana, New Orleans Museum of Art, 1979-80.

Lot Essay

Frederic Remington created iconic images of the Western frontier composed of Native Americans, cavalrymen and cowboys, subjects he described as "men with the bark on." (M. Shapiro, et al., Frederic Remington: The Masterworks, St. Louis, Missouri, 1988, p. 240) Nowhere in his oeuvre is the cowboy more celebrated than in his first bronze subject, The Broncho Buster. Originally conceived in 1895, The Broncho Buster, depicting a cowboy breaking in a wild horse, was an immediate success, symbolizing all that was triumphant and heroic in the West.

By the 1890s, Remington was a renowned illustrator, painter and an accomplished writer. Never complacent as an artist, he wanted to expand his repertoire of talent to include something "in the round as well as the flat." In 1894, at the urging of friends and fellow artists, Remington began modeling a rider mounted on a rearing horse.


The subject of the cowboy was always a central and important theme to Remington's work. The artist had written in 1895 that "with me, cowboys are what gems and porcelains are to some others." ("Cracker Cowboys of Florida," Harper's Monthly, April 1895, p. 329) Remington's keen observations and unabashed love for the cowboy and his way of life found direct expression in many of his published drawings and paintings. He also maintained an extensive collection of photographs that contained related images of rearing horses and cowboys that he drew upon for developing the intricate modeling found in his sculptures. The Broncho Buster, a subject derived from Remington's cachet of works devoted to the rearing horse and rider, reflected the artist's incredible attention to detail combined with the ingenious rendering of a specific action, intense movement and sublime balance.


The Broncho Buster was originally cast by Henry-Bonnard Bronze Co. in 1895. The foundry produced a total of 64 sand castings of the bronze between 1895 and 1900, making the present work a rare lifetime cast.

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