It’s an appropriately worked-in-leather vibe for an old-school artist. Anton eschews a lot of modern methods and what might be considered shortcuts, like the widespread use of computer technology to set up paintings. He still relies on sketches — phenomenal ones at that — to reference his work. And he sometimes simply sets up an easel outdoors to paint landscapes. “I just love to paint,” he says, revealing a lot of his secret to success.
Anton’s respect for hard work and traditional techniques has long informed a catalog of work that might jokingly be described as ranging from cowboys and ranch hands to ranch hands and cowboys. In terms of subject matter, Anton is as focused as any painter on the market.
“He’s the best at what he does — he’s capturing what will be considered the history of today’s working cowboy for many years to come,” says Brad Richardson, who, with wife Jinger, co-owns Legacy Gallery in Scottsdale, Arizona. “But what’s most important to Bill is to allow the viewer to experience the mood and atmosphere of what those cowboys are experiencing. Bill’s work is part of some of the great Western art collections of all time. One of the things [Legacy Gallery] strives to do is represent art that will stand the test of time. Bill Anton’s work will do that very thing.”
Legacy Gallery only recently began representing Anton, but Richardson says he’s been a fan and collector for many years. That’s why he’s ecstatic about hosting Under the Spell of the West this March.
“I have been asked to do [a one-man show] in recent years, but I’ve declined for many reasons,” Anton says. “It’s now the right time and the right place with the right guy.”
Although Anton hints at surprises among the 20 or so paintings that will make up the show — “California ranching seascapes? Portraits?” he teases — the majority of the works will cover the classic themes and nostalgic techniques that have made the award-winning painter a true superstar of Western art. If you want to call a cowboy on horseback fording a stream at dusk with a dark thunderhead looming in the background a cliché, that’s just fine with the good-natured and wisecracking Anton.
“It’s all cool and it’s all cliché and I don’t care — I love it,” he says, sounding more like a fresh-faced sophomore art student than a 35-year veteran of the trade. “It’s noble, elemental, emotional, and worthy of the brush. Seen TV lately? Western art is groundbreaking neurophysics by comparison.”
Once you get him talking — not hard — it doesn’t take long for Anton to get around to opinions on what he sees as the desultory direction of a lot of contemporary art.
“I believe the sometimes-irrational need for innovation in ‘modern art’ is what drove it off the cliff into pseudointellectual nonsense,” he says. “I’m more interested in ‘better’ than ‘new.’ ”
“Willingness to honestly self-evaluate is critical to artistic growth,” he told Art of the West magazine last year. “We just don’t have that institutionally today. Everything anyone does is deemed valid; nonsense!”
As it has from the day he first became obsessed with the region’s majestic landscapes — a childhood trip to Glacier National Park turned his head and changed his life — it’s the grand scenery of the West that continues to form the foundation of Anton’s work.
“The West has no competition in my mind,” he says, allowing that other places have their merits. “The prairie teaches nuance. Back East teaches you everything you didn’t know about the color green.”
Anton’s other big show in 2019 will be the elite Prix de West at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in Oklahoma City. For a man of Anton’s discipline and singular focus, it’s hard to imagine a more perfect venue.
“It’s no secret that Native American subject matter and art has over the last 20 years become more sellable than cowboy subject matter,” Richardson says. “Where a lot of his fellow artists have moved toward that more sellable subject matter, Bill has stood his ground and said, ‘This is what I do.’ I’ve always admired that.”
So, too, have legions of fans.
Bill Anton became a western painter, especially of the lifestyle of cowboys. He first traveled West at age seven. He attended Loyola University in Chicago and then transferred to Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff, Arizona, majoring in English. He settled in Arizona, and his wife, Peggy, supported him while he established his career as an artist.
He was inspired with western painting when he attended a Cowboy Artist of American Exhibition in the late 1970s at the Phoenix Art Museum. In 1982, he turned to art full time, and visiting ranches in Flagstaff and Prescott, he rode in roundups and learned to work with cattle. He also developed a love of plein-air painting and was much inspired by the work of Anders Zorn, Edgar Payne and Frank Tenney Johnson.
Source: “Prix de West” 2003 catalogue (Courtesy of AskArt)
Awards:
- 2018: Express Ranches Great American Cowboy Award, Prix de West Invitational, Nat’l Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, Oklahoma City, OK.
- 2017: Spirit of the West Award, Masters of the American West, Autry National Center, Los Angeles, CA.
- 2016: Frederic Remington Award, Prix de West Invitational, Nat’l Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, Oklahoma City, OK.
- 2015: Spirit of the West Award, Masters of the American West, Autry National Center, Los Angeles, CA.
- 2012: Museum Purchase Award, Masters of the American West, Autry National Center, Los Angeles, CA.
- 2011: Express Ranches Great American Cowboy Award, Prix de West Invitational, Nat’l Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, Oklahoma City, OK.
- Gene Autry Memorial Award, Masters of the American West, Autry National Center, Los Angeles, CA.
- Spirit of the West Award, Masters of the American West, Autry National Center, Los Angeles, CA.
- Bohlin Buckle Award, Masters of the American West, Autry National Center, Los Angeles, CA.
BILL ANTON ( 1957– )
After seeing the American West for the first time as a seven-year-old, Bill Anton vowed to return for good someday. He left his home in the Midwest some twelve years later and the Arizona high country has been home ever since. Exposed to art early and often, Anton drew constantly from the time he was old enough to hold a pencil. Inevitably, his two great loves in life united when he turned to western art full-time in 1982.
Visiting ranches around Flagstaff and Prescott, Anton began to ride roundups and brand calves. Local ranchers began calling him when they were shorthanded, although Anton never counted himself good enough to be called a “cowboy”.
After several years of making a living as an artist, he began getting national exposure but was not satisfied with the progress of his work. Through the influence of some of the country’s best painters, Anton realized that painting outside was the only way he would achieve the artistic growth he wanted. The passion and spontaneity needed for Plein Air painting began to help him solve problems in the studio as well. Drawn to the work of Zorn, Sorolla, Payne, and Frank Tenney Johnson, Anton works from field studies whenever possible to achieve the vitality photos cannot match.
Bill Anton Paintings
ِArtist Bill Anton website
via: cowboysindians.com