horseman

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  • How Order No. 6 Went Through, or the Vision museum quality giclee print canvas wrap

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    $253.00

    Frederic Sackrider Remington (October 4, 1861 – December 26, 1909) was an American painter, illustrator, sculptor, and writer who specialized in depictions of the Old American West, specifically concentrating on the last quarter of the 19th-century American West and images of cowboys, American Indians, and the U. S. Cavalry. The image likely went along with a tale published in Harper’s magazine in 1898 .

  • Winner Plug Tobacco museum quality giclee print canvas wrap

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    $253.00

    British-American Tobacco Company, Petersburg, Virginia advertising created by A. Hoen & Company. This is an early, original color ad for plug tobacco. Winner Plug Tobacco, depicts a fantasy steeplechase through a large stirrup. The advertising company, British-American Tobacco, was an amalgamation of Britain’s Imperial Tobacco Company and the American Tobacco Company. Large labels, such as this original example, were designed to be pasted onto crates and barrels of tobacco.

  • Zirkus Busch: Jack Joyce, American Cowboy museum quality giclee print canvas wrap

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    $253.00

    Circus poster featuring John Edward (Jack) Joyce (1876-1934). He was an American early-20th-century colorful figure in the world of horsemanship and animal training, who had nearly a 10-year career with Buffalo Bill on his Buffalo Bill’s Wild West. Joyce toured throughout Europe until the late 1920s. Jakob Busch (1879-1948) was the founder and owner of the itinerant Circus Busch (also known as Circus Busch-Nürnberg and Circus Busch Wanderschau), which was one of Germany’s (and Europe’s) most important traveling circuses in the 1930s. Based originally in Nuremberg, in Bavaria