Complete Art Catalog

Browse through my complete list of paintings or click a letter to jump to a list of titles starting with that letter. Click on the title or image to see more information, or click on an available product to see purchase options.

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Painting size 12" x 20", Frame size 22" x 30" Price $1450. The Tee Pee Motel is on the East side of Wharton, Texas and is one of only three of its kind remaining in the USA. Built in 1942 and went into a decline in the 1970's and was abandoned for several years. The Tee Pee has been restored and is back in business and has become quite famous recently with numerous articles and television stories. In Case you can't read the emblems, that's an Indian Motorcycle and a Chevrolet Apache Pickup that I thought would be appropriate

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To find an armadillo all we have to do is look out the back door after dark. The armadillo has become a popular animal in Texas in spite of his good looks. Some interesting armadillo trivia is that an armadillo can go underwater like a submarine and walk on the bottom or float like a cork to cross a stream and they always give birth to four babies of the same sex!

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Painting size 12" x 20", Frame size 22" x 30" Price $1450. The Tex-Ann Motel is in Palestine, Texas at 805 East Palestine Avenue and looks to be doing well.

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This painting was published on my 2007 Texas Classic Gas Stations Calendar. This Station was built in 1926 in Winters, Texas as a Magnolia Station and switched to Texaco in 1934 and operated there until 1958. in 1989 Dr. R. Lee Rode moved it to its present location at the Buffalo Gap Historic Village and restored it to its original look.

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Natures equivalent to a Drive By Shooting! A couple of years ago a Tornado barely missed our house, touched down near our barn, uprooted three trees and then skipped along for about a mile before it disappeared in the clouds!

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(Written in 1981)Last fall as I watched from my front porch this "Blue Norther" rolled across the horizon, by nightfall the temperature had dropped almost fifty degrees and winter had arrived. Although the farm scene in not the view from my front porch, it certainly was more interesting to paint.

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This house is in reality just a few blocks from my house in Austin. The house had fallen into disrepair but was purchased and is being restored by Gene and Patsy Tankersly. The house has always reminded me of a Classic Early Texas Farmhouse so I indulged in a little fantasy when I created this painting!

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It's been at least two years since the last snowfall in our part of Texas but I'm sure it will happen again someday. I found this Dempster Model 15 Windmill between Coleman and Winters, Texas.

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This title is the result of my annual contest to name one of my prints and seems appropriate due to the fact that some parts of Texas would never have been settled if it hadn't been for the Windmill providing a man made Oasis.

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This title is the result of my annual Contest to name one of my prints. We had a long drought in 1995 and as a result the spring wildflowers were hard to find. I decided to compensate for the drought by painting as many wildflowers as I could. This is mostly from my imagination but the Rock House is at Alexander, Texas and is the same one I used in my print "House of Brown Rocks".

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This Aermotor Model 702 Windmill is the same one that I used in the Painting, "Pride of Texas" except that I have shown the entire Windmill and the Longhorn Steer in named Fajita and he lives out at our place, The Background is the Davis Mountains in West Texas.

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Texas Star (Ipomopsis rubra, Phlox family) bloom in East and Central Texas from May to July and present a spectacular display standing up to five feet tall with blazing red tops, and are also called Standing Cypress, Flame Flower, Indian Plume and Red Texas Star. The Soldier Beetle lives in flower heads and feeds on pollen and other insects.

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These are five of our Longhorns getting some lunch and enjoying some color and aroma therapy from the Bluebonnets in the process. These two Live Oak Trees are located in the same rest area as the tree in Summer Surveillance!

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I was one of three "Texas Artists" commissioned by the Texas Historical Foundation to paint a scene depicting Texas for their Sesquicentennial Fundraiser, 50% of the price of this print will be donated to the Historical Foundation and a one year foundation membership is included!

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These are five of our ten Longhorns enjoying a drink and some good company. We don't have a Windmill but one is on our wish list; however we usually have plenty of Bluebonnets. Hey, y'all, two out of three ain't bad!

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This title is the result of my annual contest to name one of my prints. Due to the drought in the spring of 1998 the wildflowers were pretty scarce so I made up this scene to compensate. The rock house is near Johnson City, Texas, the windmill is near Goldthwaite, Texas, and the water tank is near Hallettsville, Texas.

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This title is the result of my annual contest to name one of my prints. Martha and I were sitting at a picnic table in the Davis Mountains when this Roadrunner came darting past. He stopped several times and posed for me as I followed him to the top of a huge rock pile.

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This painting will be published on my 2007 Texas Classic Gas Stations Calendar. This Station is in McLean, Texas on Historic Route 66, just off of current IH 20 and was built in 1929 and operated for over 50 years. This was the First Phillips 66 Station ever built in Texas and the first Service Station on Historic Route 66 to be restored.

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This painting will be published on my 2006 Texas Spanish Missions Calendar. I can't believe that I've lived in Texas this long and haven't done a painting of the Alamo, so I am finally masking things right. The Alamo was an Unfinished Mission at the time of the historic battle and the curved crown was actually added later by the U.S. Army. (you can't see the details online but in the sky just above the right side of the Alamo is the Neon sign for the Crockett Hotel and I thought since Davy Crocket Died there it almost seemed ghostly!))

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That's Rancher Morris Van of Lampassas on the right, his two sons, center and the late "Dub" Brown a lifelong Cowboy, on the left and the White Faced Hereford coming into the Chute was about to receive a Vaccination and an Ear Tag to keep the flies away.

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