Showing posts with label Equine Painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Equine Painting. Show all posts

Thursday, July 22, 2021

Native American Folklore Art,Contemporary Western Art ,Equine Painting "SITTING BULL'S DANCING HORSE" by Colorado Landscape Artist Nancee Jean Busse

 


In the 1880s Sitting Bull joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. He traveled all over the country and saw many things, but wearied of the white man’s ways. He went back to the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota to be with his Hunkpapa people. Before he left the Wild West Show, Buffalo Bill gifted him with his favorite show horse which could do many tricks.

After returning to the Reservation, Sitting Bull became the center of the Ghost Dance movement, which the white men thought was the signal for a great uprising. The Ghost Dance Movement was really a religion of despair. It gave hope to people who had been deprived of their land, their food sources, and their connection to their own ancestry.

 On a winter day in 1890 43 Indian police were sent to arrest Sitting Bull for his involvement in the Ghost Dance Movement. When they dragged him out of his teepee a commotion began, and when it was over 15 people lay dead or dying, among them Sitting Bull.

When Sitting Bull’s dancing horse heard the battle, it thought it was back in the circus at the Wild West Show. It began dancing and prancing and raising up on its back legs, bowing and curtsying and doing all of the tricks it had been taught. All who witnessed this thought that the horse was possessed because it danced through a hail of bullets and was never hit. The horse still danced for a while after the massacre ended and until the scene was silent. It had honored its master in the only way it knew.

 Native American Legend,Equine Art Painting,Sitting Bull

 36"x24" Acrylic on Yupo

 Click HERE for purchase info.

 Visit http://NanceeJean.com to view more of my work

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Saturday, November 14, 2020

Native American Folklore Art,Contemporary Western Art ,Equine Painting "SITTING BULL'S DANCING HORSE" by Colorado Landscape Artist Nancee Jean Busse

 


In the 1880s Sitting Bull joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. He traveled all over the country and saw many things, but wearied of the white man’s ways. He went back to the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota to be with his Hunkpapa people. Before he left the Wild West Show, Buffalo Bill gifted him with his favorite show horse which could do many tricks.

After returning to the Reservation, Sitting Bull became the center of the Ghost Dance movement, which the white men thought was the signal for a great uprising. The Ghost Dance Movement was really a religion of despair. It gave hope to people who had been deprived of their land, their food sources, and their connection to their own ancestry.

 On a winter day in 1890 43 Indian police were sent to arrest Sitting Bull for his involvement in the Ghost Dance Movement. When they dragged him out of his teepee a commotion began, and when it was over 15 people lay dead or dying, among them Sitting Bull.

When Sitting Bull’s dancing horse heard the battle, it thought it was back in the circus at the Wild West Show. It began dancing and prancing and raising up on its back legs, bowing and curtsying and doing all of the tricks it had been taught. All who witnessed this thought that the horse was possessed because it danced through a hail of bullets and was never hit. The horse still danced for a while after the massacre ended and until the scene was silent. It had honored its master in the only way it knew.

 Native American Legend,Equine Art Painting,Sitting Bull

 36"x24" Acrylic on Yupo

 Click HERE for purchase info.

 Visit http://NanceeJean.com to view more of my work

  Follow me on facebook
  Follow me on Pinterest
  Follow me on Instagram

Saturday, February 15, 2020

Native American Folklore Art,Contemporary Western Art ,Equine Painting "SITTING BULL'S DANCING HORSE" by Colorado Landscape Artist Nancee Jean Busse


In the 1880s Sitting Bull joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. He traveled all over the country and saw many things, but wearied of the white man’s ways. He went back to the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota to be with his Hunkpapa people. Before he left the Wild West Show, Buffalo Bill gifted him with his favorite show horse which could do many tricks.

After returning to the Reservation, Sitting Bull became the center of the Ghost Dance movement, which the white men thought was the signal for a great uprising. The Ghost Dance Movement was really a religion of despair. It gave hope to people who had been deprived of their land, their food sources, and their connection to their own ancestry.

 On a winter day in 1890 43 Indian police were sent to arrest Sitting Bull for his involvement in the Ghost Dance Movement. When they dragged him out of his teepee a commotion began, and when it was over 15 people lay dead or dying, among them Sitting Bull.

When Sitting Bull’s dancing horse heard the battle, it thought it was back in the circus at the Wild West Show. It began dancing and prancing and raising up on its back legs, bowing and curtsying and doing all of the tricks it had been taught. All who witnessed this thought that the horse was possessed because it danced through a hail of bullets and was never hit. The horse still danced for a while after the massacre ended and until the scene was silent. It had honored its master in the only way it knew.

 Native American Legend,Equine Art Painting,Sitting Bull

 36"x24" Acrylic on Yupo

 Click HERE for purchase info.

 Visit http://NanceeJean.com to view more of my work

  Follow me on facebook
  Follow me on Pinterest
  Follow me on Instagram

Thursday, April 18, 2019

Thursday, February 7, 2019

Native American Folklore Art,Contemporary Western Art ,Equine Painting "SITTING BULL'S DANCING HORSE" by Colorado Landscape Artist Nancee Jean Busse


In the 1880s Sitting Bull joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. He traveled all over the country and saw many things, but wearied of the white man’s ways. He went back to the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota to be with his Hunkpapa people. Before he left the Wild West Show, Buffalo Bill gifted him with his favorite show horse which could do many tricks.

After returning to the Reservation, Sitting Bull became the center of the Ghost Dance movement, which the white men thought was the signal for a great uprising. The Ghost Dance Movement was really a religion of despair. It gave hope to people who had been deprived of their land, their food sources, and their connection to their own ancestry.

 On a winter day in 1890 43 Indian police were sent to arrest Sitting Bull for his involvement in the Ghost Dance Movement. When they dragged him out of his teepee a commotion began, and when it was over 15 people lay dead or dying, among them Sitting Bull.

When Sitting Bull’s dancing horse heard the battle, it thought it was back in the circus at the Wild West Show. It began dancing and prancing and raising up on its back legs, bowing and curtsying and doing all of the tricks it had been taught. All who witnessed this thought that the horse was possessed because it danced through a hail of bullets and was never hit. The horse still danced for a while after the massacre ended and until the scene was silent. It had honored its master in the only way it knew.

 Native American Legend,Equine Art Painting,Sitting Bull

 36"x24" Acrylic on Yupo

 Click HERE for purchase info.

 Visit http://NanceeJean.com to view more of my work

  Follow me on facebook
  Follow me on Pinterest
  Follow me on Instagram

Saturday, September 1, 2018

Contemporary Western Art ,Equine Painting "SITTING BULL'S DANCING HORSE" by Colorado Landscape Artist Nancee Jean Busse

Fourth in my Native American Folklore series

This tale is true.

In the 1880s Sitting Bull joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. He traveled all over the country and saw many things, but wearied of the white man’s ways. He went back to the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota to be with his Hunkpapa people. Before he left the Wild West Show, Buffalo Bill gifted him with his favorite show horse which could do many tricks..........Read more HERE


 36"x24" Acrylic on Yupo

 Click HERE for more info

 Visit http://NanceeJean.com to view more of my work

  Follow me on facebook
  Follow me on Pinterest
  Follow me on Instagram

Tuesday, June 26, 2018

Colorful Contemporary Horse Art, Equine Painting "Midnight Ride" by Southeastern Wildlife Expo Artist Patricia A. Griffin


 10"x10" Oil on Canvas/Available

 Click HERE for pricing.

 10% of the profits from each painting are donated to Conservation.


 Click HERE to learn about Artists for Conservation. 


 View more of my work at https://patriciagriffinart.com



 Follow me on facebook

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 Follow me on Instagram

Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Contemporary Western Art ,Equine Painting "SITTING BULL'S DANCING HORSE" by Colorado Landscape Artist Nancee Jean Busse

Fourth in my Native American Folklore series

This tale is true.

In the 1880s Sitting Bull joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show. He traveled all over the country and saw many things, but wearied of the white man’s ways. He went back to the Standing Rock Reservation in North Dakota to be with his Hunkpapa people. Before he left the Wild West Show, Buffalo Bill gifted him with his favorite show horse which could do many tricks..........Read more HERE


 36"x24" Acrylic on Yupo

 Click HERE for more info

 Visit http://NanceeJean.com to view more of my work

Saturday, January 27, 2018

Thursday, January 25, 2018

Donkey Art,Equine Painting, "OZ" by Southeastern Wildlife Expo Artist Patricia A. Griffin



 60"x20"x1.5" Oil on Linen/Avaiable

 Click HERE for pricing.

10% of the profits from each painting are donated to Conservation.

 View more of my work at http://www.griffingallery.org


 Click HERE to learn about Artists for Conservation.

 Follow me on facebook
 Follow me on Pinterest
 Follow me on Instagram

Friday, June 16, 2017

Monday, January 23, 2017

Donkey Art,Equine Painting, "OZ" by Western Masters Artist Patricia A. Griffin


 FRESH OFF THE EASEL....

 60"x20"x1.5" Oil on Linen/Avaiable

 Click HERE for pricing.

10% of the profits from each painting are donated to Conservation.

 View more of my work at http://www.griffingallery.org


 Click HERE to learn about Artists for Conservation.

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Donkey Art,Equine Painting, "OZ" by Western Masters Artist Patricia A. Griffin


 FRESH OFF THE EASEL....

 60"x20"x1.5" Oil on Linen/Avaiable

 Click HERE for pricing.

10% of the profits from each painting are donated to Conservation.

 View more of my work at http://www.griffingallery.org


 Click HERE to learn about Artists for Conservation.

Contemporary Western Art ,Equine Painting "SITTING BULL'S DANCING HORSE" by Colorado Landscape Artist Nancee Jean Busse

 FRESH OFF THE EASEL....

 Native American Legend,Equine Art Painting,Sitting Bull

 36"x24" Acrylic on Yupo

 Click HERE for more info

 Visit http://NanceeJean.com to view more of my work

Saturday, April 30, 2016

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Tuesday, October 27, 2015

Donkey Art,Equine Painting, "OZ" by Western Masters Artist Patricia A. Griffin


 FRESH OFF THE EASEL....

 60"x20"x1.5" Oil on Linen/Avaiable

 Click HERE for pricing.

10% of the profits from each painting are donated to Conservation.

 View more of my work at http://www.griffingallery.org


 Click HERE to learn about Artists for Conservation.

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Original Watercolor Painting, "Horse Whisper", by International Watercolor Artist, Donna L. Martin

Horse Whisper
 
 
 
 
This is an original watercolor painting titled, "Horse Whisper".  It was completed by pouring and spattering color on the page, then forming the shape of the horse. 
 
 
The original is sold, but prints in various sizes are available at:

For questions or comments, please feel free to contact me at: saltlightwatercolors@yahoo.com

http://donnamartinfineart.blogspot.com/

http://donnamartinfineart.com/

My work can also be seen at:

CoArt Gallery

846 Santa Fe Drive
Denver, Co 80204
P: (303)573-5503