Littlest Straggler is a signed and numbered limited edition print by Gordon Snidow. This piece depicts a cowboy on horseback giving a young Hereford calf a ride on his trusty horse.

The image size is 14 3/4" x 22". Overall size is 20" x 26 3/4". It was published by Texas Art Press in 1979 in an edition size of 2,250.

ABOUT GORDON SNIDOW AND HIS ART:

In 1959, after receiving a Bachelors Degree in Art from the Art Center College of Design, in Los Angeles, Gordon had a career decision to make, whether to go into advertising art or to follow his dream of painting the West. At the time, no market existed for realism, let alone Western Art. He decided to follow his dream. Again he had a decision to make. The choice was whether to paint the Old West of the past, which he had no first-hand knowledge, or to chronicle the story of the Contemporary West. He chose the Contemporary West.

If Gordon painted the people and experiences while visiting ranches, then the ideas and subjects of the paintings would be his and accurate. He thought it was important to record the American West as he witnessed it. Being an eyewitness to a period of the history of the west, he portrayed real cowboys, working on real ranches. He accurately showed their lives and times. He realized that their story continued after the settling of the Old West. He wanted to tell their story.

Gordon eventually saw the West as more than ranching and the American Cowboy. He began to do paintings which included American Women, Graffiti, the Homeless, Wildlife, Vietnam Vets, and others, while still painting the American Cowboy. Because of this, he is now better known as a painter of Western Americana.

To Gordon Western Americana means the expanded reality of the Contemporary West. A West that is not romanticized in art, as is the Old West, but the real West of today. Why realism? Since he was painting real people and animals, he wanted to show various types in order to better express his painting ideas. For over fifty years, he has painted the Contemporary American West as it is, unvarnished.

It was quoted about Gordon in the 1997 National Cowboy Hall Of Fame and Western Heritage Center’s Prix de West catalog, quote; “He is a historian who records his time in pictures rather than words, and as Russell and other in-their-time “contemporary” chroniclers of the West are seen today as painters of the “historic West”, so Snidow will be seen in the future. And as his philosophical perceptions of the work he does and his place in the world of western art have evolved and changed, so have the subjects of his paintings. Although still painting the part of Americana that has brought him recognition – the contemporary American cowboy at work and play – Snidow is recording other aspects of his time.”

As a charter member of the Cowboy Artists of America, Gordon served in every office of the organization, including three times as President. While an active member, he had the privilege of competing with such artists as Clymer, Lockheed, Lovell, Warren, Reynolds, Terpning, McGrew, Riley and Ryan. After 25 years of active membership, he retired from competition to become a Member Emeritus. At that time, he was CA’s top medal winner, with 27 Gold and Silver Medals, including three Best of Show. Gordon also co-founded and served on the first board of directors of the CA museum in Kerrville, Texas. He is no longer a member.

Coors Brewery responded positively and created the famous Coors Cowboy Collectors Series. This Series has appeared as part of the sets in such movies as “RAINMAN” and “WINTER’S BONE”. He has three books written about him as well as being the subject of a BBC film. In 1998 Gordon was awarded The New Mexico Governor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts. The 2003 New Mexico Legislature honored him as Artist of the American West. Most recently, he was honored as the guest artist at the C.M. Russell Show in Great Falls, Montana. It was requested that he exhibit his work at the Norman Rockwell Museum in Corning, NY.

His work has been shown around the world including, Russia, France, England, China, Germany, and many more. In the United States, he has been invited to many major shows and his paintings hang in the permanent collections of numerous museums. Retrospective shows of his work have appeared in museums in New Mexico, Texas, and the prestigious Smithsonian in Washington D.C.

Gordon was born in Paris, Mo. in 1936. He now resides in Ruidoso, N.M.