Robert Lougheed
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Robert Lougheed 1901 -1982 was an artist who has specialized in images of the American West.
He was born in and raised on a farm in Massey, Ontario, Canada. He became an illustrator for mail-order catalogues and for the "Toronto Star", but studied in his spare time at the Ontario College of Art and then at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Montreal. He went to New York at the age of twenty-five as the pupil of Frank Vincent DuMond and Dean Cornwell at the Art Students League. However he continued to work as an illustrator for over 30 years and his work appeared in magazines such as "National Geographic" and "Reader's Digest". Lougheed's work as a commercial artist included the Mobil Oil logo of the red flying horse.
He explored the American West, particularly the old Bell Ranch, NM and many of his paintings were inspired by the scenery and animals of the region. Consequently in 1970, he was commissioned by the United States Post Office Department to design the six-cent buffalo stamp for their Wildlife Conservation Series.
Lougheed illustrated books such as: "Mustang" and "San Domingo", both by Marguerite Henry, and "The Bell Ranch As I Knew It" by George F. Ellis. He also illustrated books by Martha Downer Ellis, about the Bell Ranch, NM including "Bell Ranch Sketches", "Bell Ranch People and Places" and "Bell Ranch Recollections". He won multiple awards at both the National Academy of Western Art and the Cowboy Artists of America. Some of his work is in the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
Robert Lougheed's interest in art extended to founding of the National Academy of Art at the National Cowboy Hall of Fame. He continued to serve as an advisor to the academy for many years. He also worked voluntarily as a teacher to many young painters.