Frederic Remington lifetime casting The Outlaw No. 5 may bring $800,000 at Heritage Auctions
- DALLAS, Texas
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- October 27, 2013
– Frederick Remington’s The Outlaw No. 5, an important lifetime casting and cornerstone of frontier art and sculpture, is estimated to bring $800,000 in Heritage Auctions’ Nov. 14 Western and California Art Signature® Auction in Dallas. Considered one of Remington’s most dynamic sculptures, the bronzehighlights more than 130 lots of fine art by Thomas Hill, Carl Rungius, Edgar Payne, Leon Gaspard, Guy Rose, Birger Sandzén, William Robinson Leigh, and G. Harvey.
With just 15 original casts produced during Remington’s lifetime, The Outlaw No. 5 reflects the artist’s obsessive attention to detail and fervent passion for the American cowboy. The cast appearing at Heritage is numbered “No. 5” beneath the base with foundry marks identifying the work as being made by Roman Bronze Works. N.Y. A sizeable portion of the proceeds from the sale of The Outlaw No. 5 will support an Arizona scholarship fund.
“The foundry’s ledger entry, which documented payment received, has overshadowed the history of this important lifetime casting of one of Remington’s rarest subject matters,” said Kirsty Buchanan, Associate Director of Western Art at Heritage. “We are indebted to Mr. Michael Greenbaum and Mr. Thomas Smith (of the Denver Art Museum) for their assistance in identifying this casting as a lifetime work of Frederic Remington.”
The sculpture highlights a far-reaching treasury of art celebrating the last American frontier starting with Out to Sea, Point Lobos by Rose, which could sell for $200,000+ and Elk by Carl Clemens Moritz Rungius, which is expected to bring $60,000+.
Siberian Girl (No. 14) was discovered during a Heritage Appraisal Days event after it had spent much of the 20th century in a gloomy Chicago basement. The owner declared no one in the family liked the painting and it nearly ended up in the trash before Heritage’s experts identified it as a work by Leon Gaspard, a Russian-born artist and one of the greatest portraitists of the modern era. The painting is expected to sell for $20,000+.
A watercolor by William Robinson Leigh titled The Mesa Trail, are both conservatively estimated to bring $10,000+ and Henry Herman Cross’s portrait of Rain in the Face, Sioux Chief, the Native American credited with killing Gen. George Custer, is expected to sell for $8,000+.
The auction offers a seamless transition between Western Art and California Art in works such as Yosemite, 1889 by Thomas Hill. “The work is one of Hill’s iconic representations of Yosemite as an untouchable and majestic force that no human being could ever rival,” said Alissa Ford, Director of California Art at Heritage. The 24” x 16” oil on canvas is expected to bring $30,000+.
“Plein Air collectors want images that capture the untouched beauty of the western landscape and the intensity of the atmosphere,” she said, singling out Cathedral Point, Utah by Franz A Bischoff crossing the block with a $40,000+ estimate. “At 30 x 40 inches, this work offers all of the premier qualities of a well-done landscape. Cathedral Point stands bold while cumulous clouds drift above a meandering river that flows through the rugged cliffs of Utah. It is amongst the most vibrant and stunning of Bischoff’s plein air work and truly displays his talents as a California & Western Impressionist.”
In addition, Millard Sheets’ West Coast of Japan near Izumi is expected to bring $6,000+ and Edwin Deakin’s historically significant work Fort Point, San Francisco, 1876 may fetch $4,000+.
Additional highlights include but are not limited by:
Sunset on the Foothills (Pasadena)by Edgar Alwin Payne. Estimate: $30,000+.
Indian on Horseback by Charles Marion Russell. Estimate: $30,000+.
In the Mountains, Colorado (Rocky Mountain National Park) by Birger Sandzén. Estimate: $30,000+.
The Gift by G. Harvey. Estimate: $30,000+.
Heritage Auctions is the largest auction house founded in the United States and the world’s third largest, with annual sales of more than $800+ million, and 800,000+ online bidder members. For more information about Heritage Auctions, and to join and receive access to a complete record of prices realized, with full-color, enlargeable photos of each lot, please visit HA.com