Folder Unknown
Contains 12748 Results:
The Buffalo Family, 1924
Leather album page with a photograph of a bronze buffalo family. Remarks about the photograph include, "This contented family have been feeding or just come from water and now filled up are lying down to rest while father bull stands guard."
The Mountain Sheep, 1924
Leather album page with a photograph of a bronze sheep with horns. The remarks of the photograph include, "These mountain sheep inhabit the Rockies and are very sure footed. They can travel over slippery rock and other bad places where no other animal could go."
The Mountain Mother, 1924
Leather album page with a photograph of a mother bear and her two cubs in bronze. Remarks about the photograph include, "Mother and cubs hunting ants on the old pine top. She is scolding one of the cubs who is reaching too far over the edge and might slip off."
The Bluffers, 1924
Leather album page with a photograph of a bear and a buffalo bronze. The remarks of the photograph include, "These two animals are the biggest we have and when they meet, they are so evenly matched as to strength that they just blow and roar at each other and that is all there is to it, usually. They just bluff as each is afraid of the other."
The Pig, January 1925
Leather album page with a photograph of a bronze pig. Remarks about the photograph include, "Charlie modelled this piece for my little daughter from was in our home in Jamaica, Long Island."
The Wolf, 1925
Leather album page with a photograph of a wolf bronze. Remarks about the photograph include, "Modelled for my daughter in wax by Charlie while visiting us in Jamaica, Long Island."
The Grizzly, 1925
Leather album page with a photograph of a grizzly bear bronze. Remarks of the photograph include, "Modelled and given by Charlie to my daughter for Christmas, 1925. Signed, 'To Today from C.M.R.'"
The Robe Flesher, 1925
Leather album page with a photograph of a bronze of a woman cleaning a buffalo hide. The remarks of the photograph include, "After a kill of buffalo and the meat and hides have been brought into camp the hide, or robe, is staked out on the ground and the woman with a sharp-edged bone scrapes all of the flesh and fat from the hide preparing it for tanning."
The Texas Steer, 1925
Leather album page with a photograph of a bronze steer. The marks of the photograph include, "After a long drive on the cattle trails, the steers after feeding are ready to bed down for the night and chew their cud in solid contentment."
The Range Father, 1926
Leather album page with a photograph of a bronze stallion chasing a coyote. Remarks include, "Coyotes in numbers will attack and kill young colts. Hence this stallion is protecting his bunch of mares and colts by chasing and often killing the coyote with one stroke of his front hoof on the coyote's back."