Pierson Gallery: American Fine Art

Fine Art and Framing on Historic Cherry Street in Tulsa, Oklahoma

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OKLAHOMA ARTISTS ASSORTED

OKLAHOMA ARTIST LIST

Emilio Amero

David Charles Anderson

Ina Annette

Eugene Allen Bavinger

Frederick Becker

Gail Booth

Dorothea Stevenson Casady

Brunel De Bost Faris

John D. Free

Alan Frakes

Joey Frisillo

Leonard Good

David Halpern

Bill Harrison

Stanley Hess

Alexander Hogue

Oscar Brousse Jacobson

Nota Johnson

Emil W. Lenders

Jill Leslye

Robert E. Maker

J. Jay McVicker

Orren Mixer

OKLA GRAPHICS BOOK 1941

Don Pearson

Doel Reed

Charles Reynolds

Scott Rutherfurd

Diane Salamon

Nan Sheets

Jason Stone

Willard Stone

John Brooks Walton

Charles Banks Wilson

NATIVE AMERICAN OBJECTS

NATIVE AMERICAN JEWELRY

NATIVE AMERICAN, ASSORTED

AMERICAN INDIAN LIST

Fred Beaver

Joe Beeler

Woody Big Bow

Marrs Biggoose

Archie Blackowl

Acee Blue Eagle

Wayne Cooper

Woody Crumbo

Enoch Kelly Haney

Kiowa Five

Mike Larsen

Brent Learned

Merlin Little Thunder

Bobby Martin

Doc Tate Nevaquaya

Joe Rector

Louis Shipshee

Michael Squire

Robert Taylor

Jerome Tiger

Tony Tiger

Gary Warner

AMERICAN ART, assorted I

AMERICAN ART, assorted II

Phil Epp

Adele Earnshaw

Charles Warren Eaton

John Farnsworth

Mark Gould

Edmund Henry Osthaus

Schempf Collection

Miscellaneous Fine Art

FINE ART PRINTS

ASSORTED ITEMS

VINTAGE PHOTOGRAPHS

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P I E R S O N G A L L E R Y: American Fine Art
Boston Avenue Frame
On Historic Cherry Street at South Peoria and 15th
1311 East 15th  - Tulsa OK 74120

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Edmund Henry Osthaus (1858-1928)
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  This biography from the Archives of AskART: EDMUND HENRY OSTHAUS (German-American, 1858-1928) Born in Hildesheim, Germany, Edmund Osthaus studied at the Royal Academy of Arts between 1874 and 1882. There in Dusseldorf he was instructed by noted artists such as Andreas Muller, Peter Jansen, E.V. Gebhardt, E. Deger and later by Christian Kroner a wildlife painter and landscapist. Osthaus immigrated to the United States in 1883 to be with his parents in Ohio. He eventually became the chief instructor of the Toledo Academy of Fine Arts, and later the director of the Academy between 1886 and 1893. After he resigned, Osthaus devoted his time to shooting and painting for his own fulfillment. Osthaus knew dogs comprehensively and participated in field trials and confirmation shows with his own setters and pointers. Furthermore, he judged trials and was a charter member of the National Field Trial Association formed in Newton, North Carolina in 1895. His immersion in the world of competitive gun dogs provided abundant subject matter. True to his classical art education, Osthaus executed detailed and life-like portraits of dogs in the field at work, and at play and rest. His mediums were watercolor, oil and pencil. Many of his paintings included field trial champion pointers and setters. Generally he executed compositions of one, two or three dogs and on occasion more, working from life. His paintings are captivating and pull viewers into the composition - one can easily imagine his dogs running afield and moments of suspense from the hunt. Osthaus painted setters which display a traditional sitting position. Setters were derived from medieval hunting dogs that were trained to find birds and then to “set” (crouch or lie down) so that a net could be thrown over both the birds and dog. As firearms came into use, setters were trained to adopt a more upright stance. Over time, training elevated the tail of setters and pointers to an upright position. The artist’s paintings came into great demand in the late 1890’s. Wealthy families and collectors, such as the Vanderbilts and Morgans, became patrons commissioning large scenes for their lavish homes. Also, Osthaus furthered his reputation with a series of postcards, prints, and calendar pictures done for the DuPont Company. Osthaus established a studio in Los Angeles, California in 1911 and stayed there for the remainder of his life. However, he traveled frequently, painting throughout the States. He maintained homes in Ohio and New Jersey, and wintered on his hunting property in Marianna, Florida. On January 30, 1928, at the age of seventy, Osthaus passed away while at his Florida lodge. Today he is best known for having chronicled the American field dog and producing a sizable body of scenes of gun dogs at work of exceptional quality. Written by Curtis Tierney Sources: William Secord, A Breed Apart, The Art Collection of the American Kennel Club and the American Kennel Club Museum of the Dog The Horse and Hound in Art: An Encyclopedia of Sporting Art Literature: A Breed Apart, The Art Collection of the American Kennel Club and the American Kennel Club Museum of the Dog, Secord, William, Antique Collector’s Club, Woodbridge, Suffolk England, 2001, 325 pages Animal and Sporting Art in America, Reuter Jr., Turner, The National Sporting Library, Middleburg, Virginia, 2008, 880 pages Artists in California, 1786-1940, Hughes, Edan Milton, Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, California, 2002, 1250 pages (two volumes) Collections: Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio Oshkosh Public Museum, Oshkosh, Wisconsin Port Huron Museum, Port Huron, Michigan The Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, Ohio The Washington County Museum of Fine Arts, Hagerstown, Maryland

PIERSON GALLERY: American Fine Art

1311 East 15th Street - Tulsa, OK 74120

918.584.2440

piersongallery@sbcglobal.net

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