Frederic Sackrider Remington

Few artists of the American West
could equal the breadth of experience of FREDERIC SACKRIDER REMINGTON
(1861-1909). From the Santa Fe Trail to the Oregon Trail, he came to possess
firsthand knowledge as a rancher, a military scout, a hunter and trapper, and as
a reporter. Few of his contemporaries were equally devoted to capturing that
particular historical moment, the three brief decades that saw the taming of the
expansive and dangerous western frontier. Looking back at his career in 1905,
Remington wrote: "I knew the wild riders and the vacant land were about to
vanish forever...and the more I considered the subject, the bigger the forever
loomed. Without knowing how to do it, I began to record some facts around me,
and the more I looked the more the panorama unfolded."
As did his talent. His evolving clarity of purpose and the naturally vivid
subject matter inspired Remington to compulsively record the details, producing
thousands of illustrations in the course of his twenty-three year career. Their
accuracy, immediacy and drama, anchored by his equestrian expertise, fused his
functions as artist and historian.
Following his graduation from Yale's new art school in 1880, Remington roamed
the country west of the Mississippi for five years. His drawings began appearing
regularly in Harper's in 1886, answering the popular need to know about
Indian wars, wagon trains and cattle drives. He would return to the West for
three months annually for many years, aware of his mission and of the source of
his success: the crucial marriage of his "hard as nails" style with
his subject matter. One critic said that his uncompromising depiction of the
"stark reality" of Western life "gives him both his style and his
interpretation". Another said that "under a burning sun, he has worked
out an impressionism of his own". And the painter Childe Hassam wrote
enthusiastically to the artist: "You are sure to have lots of
success...Nobody else can do (these pictures)." He turned his studios into
veritable museums of Western artifacts. Theodore Roosevelt offered this blunt
praise in 1907: "He has portrayed a most characteristic and yet vanishing
type of American life." His dedication to representing the facts of the
Western experience was at the core of his endeavors, to which this country owes
its most complete, faithful and compelling portrayal of its frontier heritage,
from the most vivid, savage conflict to the lost, vast stillness of real
wilderness.