
Howard Terpning Limited Edition Artist Proof Print:"White Man Fire Sticks - Paper"

Artist: Howard Terpning
Title: White Man Fire Sticks
Size: 17.5"w x 23.5"h
Edition: Artist Proof Hand Signed and Numbered to 35 COA included.
Medium: Fine Art Canvas Giclee
About the Art: Warriors engaged in battle, a fine art first for Howard Terpning®. It is a moment captured with a veteran’s eye: rarely does a soldier see or is aware of much in battle except what happens immediately around him. This is a classic Terpning, subtle and elegant to the eye because of a powerful and complex design beneath. It is a merging of "The Long Shot" and "The Force of Nature Humbles All Man."
"White Man Fire Sticks" was the last painting Howard completed before his phenomenally successful one-man retrospective "A Tribute to the Plains People." It was an image never before seen by the public and it was one of the most popular at the show.
“The Native people were awestruck when they first saw firearms carried by the white man and how destructive they were,” Terpning says. “The early muskets were smooth bore flintlocks and, for their time, were very effective although such a weapon took time to re-load as opposed to the use of the bow and arrows.
“To the first Americans, they seemed to be sticks that shot fire out of one end. These two Blackfoot warriors are engaged in a small skirmish with their enemy, possibly the Flatheads. This area is near the Swan River in the Flathead Valley of Montana.”
Title: White Man Fire Sticks
Size: 17.5"w x 23.5"h
Edition: Artist Proof Hand Signed and Numbered to 35 COA included.
Medium: Fine Art Canvas Giclee
About the Art: Warriors engaged in battle, a fine art first for Howard Terpning®. It is a moment captured with a veteran’s eye: rarely does a soldier see or is aware of much in battle except what happens immediately around him. This is a classic Terpning, subtle and elegant to the eye because of a powerful and complex design beneath. It is a merging of "The Long Shot" and "The Force of Nature Humbles All Man."
"White Man Fire Sticks" was the last painting Howard completed before his phenomenally successful one-man retrospective "A Tribute to the Plains People." It was an image never before seen by the public and it was one of the most popular at the show.
“The Native people were awestruck when they first saw firearms carried by the white man and how destructive they were,” Terpning says. “The early muskets were smooth bore flintlocks and, for their time, were very effective although such a weapon took time to re-load as opposed to the use of the bow and arrows.
“To the first Americans, they seemed to be sticks that shot fire out of one end. These two Blackfoot warriors are engaged in a small skirmish with their enemy, possibly the Flatheads. This area is near the Swan River in the Flathead Valley of Montana.”

Video Not Avaibale.





