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Accomplishments

Illustration

Remington made his name as an illustrator, mostly of western and military subjects, for most of the widely circulated magazines of the late 1880s and 1890s. Among the magazines he illustrated were Harper’s Weekly, Harper’s Monthly, Century, Collier’s, Outing, Boys’ Life, and Cosmopolitan. He remains most closely associated with depictions of the old West.

He created most of the art for reproduction in books and magazines using black and white media: pen and ink, ink wash and gouache, and black and white oil.

His magazine work also included self-assigned reporting missions, which resulted in many articles both written and illustrated by Frederic Remington.

Writing

Remington was unafraid of writing, and specialized in tales of high adventure in the West. His magazine articles were collected into books, and he published works of fiction as well, amounting to eight books in all: Pony Tracks (1895), A Rogers Ranger in the French and Indian War (1897), Crooked Trails (1898), Sundown Leflare (1899), Stories of Peace and War (1899), Men with the Bark On (1900), John Ermine of the Yellowstone (1902) and The Way of an Indian (1906).

Bronzes

In 1895 Remington began to make sculptures, producing 22 different subjects. He worked in clay. His clay models were cast in bronze at art foundries. His first four subjects were cast using the sand casting method at the Henry-Bonnard Co. In 1898 he began working exclusively with Roman Bronze Works, N.Y., which employed the lost wax casting method. For an accounting of legitimate bronze casts and their whereabouts, see Icons of the West: Frederic Remington’s Sculpture by Michael D. Greenbaum, published in 1996 by the Frederic Remington Art Museum Remington’s bronzes were titled as follows. Unless otherwise noted they were cast at Roman Bronze Works, N.Y. using the lost-wax bronze casting method. Bronzes are listed in order of copyright.

    1895 The Broncho Buster *
    1896 The Wounded Bunkie**
    1898 The Wicked Pony *
    1898 The Scalp *
    1900 The Norther
    1901 The Cheyenne
    1901 The Buffalo Signal
    1902 Coming Through the Rye
    1903 The Mountain Man
    1904 Polo
    1904 The Sergeant
    1905 The Rattlesnake
    1905 Dragoons 1850
    1906 The Outlaw
    1906 Paleolithic Man
    1907 The Horse Thief
    1907 The Buffalo Horse
    1908 The Cowboy
    1908 The Savage
    1909 Trooper of the Plains 1868
    1909 The Broncho Buster (large version)
    1909 The Stampede

* These sculptures were cast at the Henry-Bonnard Co. using the sand casting method, and also cast at Roman Bronze Works, NY using the lost-wax casting method.

** This sculpture was only cast at the Henry-Bonnard Co. using the sand casting method.

Paintings


Methods

Remington traveled west many times to report for magazines and to accumulate photographs, make sketches and buy props for his studio. This enabled him to create accurate details and gain inspiration each day in the comfort of his studio.

Frederic Remington Art Museum, 303 Washington Street, Ogdensburg, NY 13669 - 315.393.2425