-40%

Quincy Tahoma "The Runaway Stallion" 1952 - #283/1000 - 24" x 20" with Mat

$ 475.2

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Condition: Used
  • Artisan: Quincy Tahoma
  • Tribal Affiliation: Navajo
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Origin: Navajo
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Culture: Native American: US
  • Provenance: Ownership History Not Available
  • Modified Item: No

    Description

    Quincy Tahoma "The Runaway Stallion" 1952 - #283/1000.
    QUINCY TAHOMA (NAVAJO, 1920 - 1956)
    Signed, lower right corner - Tahoma 52'
    Dimensions: 24" long x 20" wide including mat.
    Your artwork will be professionally packaged for its safe delivery to you.
    Condition Report
    , In overall excellent condition. There are 2 small marks on the left side of the picture, barely noticeable in person. (Haven't examined under the mat.) This was found in an attic of a woman who passed away. When cleaning out the home, I came across this magnificent Stallion picture. No folds or creases.
    Matted dimensions: 24 x 20 inches.
    Early in Tohoma's career, his paintings were serene and soothing in tone, but increasingly they had subject matter of bloody wars and men killing animals. In retrospect, Tahomas subjects were traditional Indian pursuits such as riding, fishing, and hunting, and he also painted distinctive landscape scenes.
    He was known for his brilliant colors and precise lines along with the two-dimensional disposition of his work reflected the nature of American Indian painting in the American Southwest at that time. His imaginative style and elegant designs distinguished him from his peers. Rather than posing his subjects in a static manner, Tahoma painted them in action. For early 20th-century, studio-taught painting, Tahoma incorporated more action and varied techniques in his work.
    One of the most dynamic, imaginative and gifted of Southwest Indian artists was Quincy Tahoma. He also revealed in his works the extreme rhythm and decorative feelings that are essentially Indian. Tahoma lived the life of an average Navajo boy, herding sheep and riding horseback,” wrote art historian Clara Lee Tanner.