Albert Bierstadt (1830-1902)
Property from the Collection of Joy and Ed Bell Joy and Ed were both born and reared in Dallas during a time when the city was still small enough for the two to find each other, fall in love, and marry. Ed enjoyed the rough and tumble of Dallas' growing pains and enthusiastically joined the fray with his own road construction company. Joy relished the more refined aspects of what Dallas had to offer and what she could accomplish through her own painting and other artistic talents, but she also knew there was more to experience elsewhere. So after their children were grown, Joy and Ed took many trips to New York and Europe before making their decision to start their own collection of art. Focusing on American nineteenth and early twentieth century paintings, Joy would do copious research before attending each of the New York auctions where they purchased one to two paintings a year. Eventually, they had assembled an impressive group that included painters such as Albert Bierstadt and Norman Rockwell among other prominent American artists whose works of art are included in this collection being offered for sale. Joy and Ed loved living with these beautiful pieces of art and sharing them with their children, grandchildren and friends.
Albert Bierstadt (1830-1902)

Rocky Mountain Sheep or Big Horn, Ovis, Montana

Details
Albert Bierstadt (1830-1902)
Rocky Mountain Sheep or Big Horn, Ovis, Montana
signed 'ABierstadt' (lower right)
oil on canvas tacked over panel
50¼ x 42½ in. (127.8 x 108 cm.)
Painted circa 1884.
Provenance
The artist.
Private collection, acquired from the above.
By descent.
Sotheby's, New York, 6 December 1984, lot 97.
Acquired by the present owner from the above.
Literature
The Art Union, vol. I, no. 4, New York, April 1884, p. 1, artotype illustrated as frontispiece.
Boston Transcript, May 26, 1884, p. 6, artotype referenced (as Rocky Mountain Sheep).
(Possibly) G. Hendricks, "The First Three Western Journeys of Albert Bierstadt," The Art Bulletin, September 1964, pp. 261, 363, no. 247.
R. Stewart, Visions of the West, exhibition catalogue, Dallas, Texas, 1986, pp. 19, 55, no. 4, illustrated (as Rocky Mountain Sheep).
N.K. Anderson, et al., Albert Bierstadt: Art & Enterprise, exhibition catalogue, New York, 1990, pp. 251, 284, fig. 125, artotype illustrated.
Exhibited
Dallas, Texas, Dallas Museum of Art, Visions of the West, September 28-November 30, 1986.

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Lot Essay

In 1876 Albert Bierstadt, renowned for his awe-inspiring depictions of the American West, accompanied the hunter Wyndham Thomas Wyndham-Quin, the fourth Earl of Dunraven, on a moose-hunting trip in Colorado. Some of the sketches that Bierstadt produced on this trip were later used as illustrations by Dunraven's brother-in-law for his 1879 travelogue Wanderings in the Western Lands. Bierstadt transposed several illustrations for publication in New York's Art Union of April 1884 and the present painting, Rocky Mountain Sheep or Big Horn, Ovis Montana, was reproduced as the frontispiece. The work's magnificent representation of local wildlife, amid large scale scenery and dramatic light, embodies Bierstadt's exceptional ability to capture the mystique of the American West in his paintings and bring it to the public.

Bierstadt traveled West and saw the Rocky Mountains for the first time in 1859, when he accompanied Colonel Frederick Lander's United States Government expedition to map an overland route from Fort Laramie, Wyoming, to the Pacific Ocean. From the start he sketched the awe-inspiring mountains, lakes, valleys and rivers, and the Indians and animals that lived among them. Bierstadt began exhibiting paintings with Rocky Mountain subjects in January 1860, and his pictures were met with immediate enthusiasm. After viewing one of these paintings, a writer for the Crayon commented: "The scenery of this section of our territory has for a long time been a curiosity to lovers of landscape, who have been excited and yet not satisfied by the vague and contradictory reports of explorers. Through the better expression of the brush we can now form some idea of it, Mr. Bierstadt's pencil being too true and too powerful to be questioned." (as quoted in N.K. Anderson, "'Wondrously Full of Invention': The Western Landscapes of Albert Bierstadt" in Albert Bierstadt: Art & Enterprise, New York, 1991, pp. 73-74)

Bierstadt revisited the Rocky Mountains throughout his career and these works continued to achieve critical acclaim. On August 31, 1877, nearly two decades after the initial reviews on the subject, a critic for The Rocky Mountain News extolled both the beauty of the local terrain and Bierstadt's talent in capturing its natural splendor in his paintings: "He could not have found a more lovely spot than this Gem of the Rocky Mountains as the scene of the highest triumphs of his art. The massive grandeur and everlasting strength of the granite walls which environ this beautiful retreat, and the infinite variety and loveliness of landscape displayed through the park, have made so powerful an impression on the artist's mind that the subject has thoroughly absorbed his thought; the bold and rugged, as well as the soft and beautiful features of this enchanting region, as they appear on the glowing canvas, show at once the true artistic interpretation and the unerring touch of the master hand." (as quoted in G. Hendricks, Albert Bierstadt: Painter of the American West, New York, 1974, p. 254)

Filled with resplendent light and majestic scenery, Rocky Mountain Sheep or Big Horn, Ovis Montana is a testament to Bierstadt's understanding of the powerful imagery and wildlife associated with the American wilderness. In the present work, Bierstadt dramatically represents a magnificent big horn sheep with several others behind him in the background. The sheep strikes a regal pose standing atop a rock. Its elevated stature and stately stance are further enhanced by the low vantage point as well as emphasizing the dramatic terrain. As snow softly falls from the dark clouds, the rays of sun breaking through the clouds rake across the sheep's fur and dramatically hits the snow covered landscape. This warm glow envelops and unites the entire composition and emphasizes Bierstadt's well known love of the sublime in nature.

Paintings such as Rocky Mountain Sheep or Big Horn, Ovis Montana effectively capture the wilderness of the American West. Intensely curious about the far reaches of their own continent, Americans looked to Bierstadt to convey the thrill and drama inherent in these remote national territories. In Rocky Mountain Sheep or Big Horn, Ovis Montana, Bierstadt celebrates the dramatic beauty of the Rocky Mountain's unique fauna and geological wonders through his keen sense of color, light and dramatic composition. Images such as Rocky Mountain Sheep or Big Horn, Ovis Montana transcend formal artistic expressions and became mythic beacons of the West for which Bierstadt is most celebrated.

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