Description: Offers welcomed & encouraged! Offered here is a beautiful original oil by Warren Eliphalet Rollins (1861-1962), the recognized Dean of Santa Fe Art Colony. The 2 Native American teepees and the sky are beautifully rendered with impressive and masterful impasto. We strive to describe the item as accurately as possible. Unless otherwise stated, all items come with 100% money back guarantee if not as described. Please feel free to ask questions. Item details: Medium: oil on board Height: 11-1/4” Width: 13-1/2” Overall dimensions incl frame: 15-7/8” x 18-1/8” x 1-1/4”thick Frame: original hand carved period frame. Appears to be original to the painting. Signed: W E Rollins on lower right. Partially hidden under the frame Condition: painting and original period frame are both in excellent condition. A light cleaning and varnish will make the painting pop.The frame has one small, slightly larger than pinhole size chip of the patina. ARTIST BIO: WARREN ELIPHALET ROLLINS (1861-1962) Born in Carson City, Nevada, Warren Rollins became known as the "Dean of the Santa Fe Art Colony" and was at the height of his career between 1908 and 1928. He was especially skilled at capturing the colors of the Southwest into his paintings. He first went West as an itinerant sign painter. He trained at the San Francisco School of Design where he briefly served as Assistant Director. In 1887, he settled in San Diego, and during this period, he became interested in Indian subject matter. He and his wife and two daughters then traveled through every Western state from Mexico to Canada, and in Montana, he did a portrait of Calamity Jane. During the sitting, she drank and wept and told him her story, and this portrait, treasured because it was the only one ever done of her, was lost in a fire at the Billings Club. By 1893, he was in Taos, then one of only four Anglo artists there, and he later returned where he had a studio near his close friend, E.I. Couse. In 1900, he spent a year in Arizona painting among the Hopi Indians and later the Navajo and Zuni tribes. The next year he began a commission for two historical paintings of the the Lewis and Clark Exposition. He painted the Grand Canyon so much that Santa Fe Railroad personnel built him a cabin on the rim at Paradise Point. Many of his paintings are in the Railroad collection. He settled in Santa Fe and earned a prestigious reputation as a teacher of art at the Palace of the Governors. He served as first president of the Santa Fe Art Club. His works were among the earliest to be shown at the new Museum of New Mexico, and his work appeared in about twenty-five exhibitions in Santa Fe between 1916 and 1977. He also did murals for the Museum as well as the post office and Bishops Lodge. He died at the age of 100 in Winslow, Arizona. Sources include: American Art Review, August 2004
Price: 2875 USD
Location: Tracy, California
End Time: 2025-02-14T00:45:54.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Artist: Warren Eliphalet Rollins
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Size: Small
Title: Laguna Shore
Material: Oil On Board
Item Length: 13-1/2”
Region of Origin: Southwest
Subject: Landscape, Native American Teepees
Type: Painting
Unit Type: Unit
Year of Production: 1910s-1920s
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Item Height: 11-1/4”
Theme: Art, Cities & Towns, Famous Places, History, Nature, Southwest Art
Style: Impressionism, Plein Air, Early California, Native American, Post-Impressionism
Features: One of a Kind (OOAK)
Production Technique: Oil Painting
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
Unit Quantity: 1
Item Width: 1-1/4
Culture: Southwest
Time Period Produced: 1900-1924