Angus. . .Black Ink/Black Pencil
Medora. . .Colored Pencil
"Shepherds of the Wind". . .Oil
"Two Hatchet" (Kiowa) #50 sepia s/n Lithographs 13-1/2x16
"Navajo" (Name Unknown) #100 black/white s/n Lithographs 13-1/2x16
"Two Hatchet" (Kiowa) #50 black/white s/n Lithographs 13-1/2x16
"Sitting Bull" (Sioux) #100 black/white s/n Lithographs 19x15
"Big Medicine" (1923 - 1959). . .Oil on Leather
Private Collection: Jean Reeves, Valparaiso, IN
37" X 49" Original Oil on Stretched Canvas The painting was done only from my imagination, and feelings for the working horse in the bicentennial year of 1976. (Notice the red, white and blue in the painting). The painting is in excellent condition.  Price: $1,800 plus shipping.
Private Collection: Eugene Burke, Red Wing, MN
Private Collection: Joe Partch
Private Collection: Bridget Toll, Düsseldorf, Germany
Private Collection: Don & Pat Malinowski, Hopkins, MN
Private Collection: Eugene Burke, Red Wing, MN
Private Collection: Don & Pat Malinowski, Hopkins, MN
Private Collection: Kathy Sater-Partch
Private Collection: Joe & Kathy Partch
Private Collection: Ann M. Waldron, Innsbruck, MN
Roaches were and are still worn by both Plains and Woodland Indians. Some are made by simply cutting a strip of deerskin with the hair
on it -- from the rump part of the hide. This is dyed red and worn as shown on this Kiowa, "Two Hatchet." Some were made of horsehair, some of porcupine guard hair
and some of a combination of both. The roach, from which the one described here, is an attractive head ornament for any warrior. We cannot all be chiefs, but
we can be good warriors, and such should be well dressed. Lithographs: $45.00
A moment frozen in time, his eyes clearly etched and sharply focused. Within this portrait, the viewer's focus always returns to
the eyes -- the reflecting mirrors of one's soul, bringing forth moods and sentiment of a bygone era. Lithographs: $45.00
Roaches were and are still worn by both Plains and Woodland Indians. Some are made by simply cutting a strip of deerskin with the hair on it -- from the rump
part of the hide. This is dyed red and worn as shown on this Kiowa, "Two Hatchet." Some were made of horsehair, some of porcupine guard hair and some of a combination
of both. The roach, from which the one described here, is an attractive head ornament for any warrior. We cannot all be chiefs, but we can be good warriors, and such
should be well dressed. Lithographs: $45.00
"Sitting Bull" was born in 1831 at Grand River in what is now South Dakota, the only son of a Hunkpapa warrior called "Returns-Again." Returns-Again was
a mystic, as his son would be. Sitting Bull's great stature as a tribal leader stemmed in no small part from his gift for simple, almost poetic eloquence.
His words often reflected the insprination that he drew from the ancestral Sioux would that he so passionately loved. Indeed, he once remarked that in the morning when he walked
barefoot upon its soil, he could "hear the very heart of the holy earth." After the conquest of Custer, Sitting Bull was the most famed of Chiefs - "the hero of his Race," said an
officer who knew him in the 1880's, the age at which he was in this portrait. Lithographs: $45.00
Private Collection: Joe Partch
"The Bicentennial Team"
37" X 49" Original Oil on Stretched Canvas The painting was done only from my imagination, and feelings for the working horse in the bicentennial year of 1976. (Notice the red, white and blue in the painting). The painting is in excellent condition.
Price: $1,800 plus shipping.
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