| |

Dry Moccasins
by John Buxton
Who could this person be? He is alone and has stopped on his water
route long enough to build a fire, have a bit to eat and drink,
maybe even to dry items that have gotten wet along the way.
This is the 18th centurysomewhere. Is he English
or
their enemy, the French? We cannot see enough of his flintlock to
tell if it is of French or English design. He appears to be a trader,
but doesnt have much with him. The cloth near his leg reveals
his goods: silver trade items. His pistol is fully cocked; is he
fearful? He has no furs and his Algonquin canoe isnt large
enough for many anyway. His mismatched paddles might have come from
two different Indian tribes.
Could this man be the English trader, John Frasier, as he escaped
downriver from the French soldiers at Venangohis trading post
on the Allegheny Riverin 1752? The French had come down from
what is now Canada into the Ohio Valley, along the Allegheny River,
to rid the region of English influence. They confiscated Frasiers
trading post and a blacksmith shop. Fraser lost all his trade goods
but escaped capture.
MasterWork
Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Giclée Canvas:
limited to 25 s/n.
38"w x 26"h (unstretched).
$1250
Ask
About Availability
Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Giclée
Canvas:
limited to 75 s/n.
25"w x 17"h.
$495
Ask
About Availability
Arriving March 2008
| Also
by John Buxton |

The Fording Place
by John Buxton
Canvas
|
|
|

Eyes of Warning
by Simon Combes
Simon Combes is best known for his paintings of African wildlife,
but his deepest passion was the great cats of the world. In 1994
Combes, along with Greenwich Workshop founder Dave Usher, circled
the globe to find and paint ten of the worlds most magnificent
felines. The jaguar of South America proved to be the most elusive
of the collection and the resulting portrait became one of Combesmost
celebrated works.
I spent time with Reina, a thirteen-year-old female jaguar,
at a 125,000-acre ranch in Venezuela called Hato El Frio where wildlife
is protected, wrote Simon Combes in his journal of the trip.
Previously, I had been concerned about how to show in my paintings
the difference between jaguar and leopard. Having seen Reina, I
will never forget. A jaguar is a bigger and more thickset animal,
with powerful legs and a heavy head and jaw. Her coat was very short,
shiny and a rich russet-gold that made her invisible in dappled
sunlight, only ten yards away. The spots are bold and those on the
flanks are large rough circles with several black dots insidevery
different from a leopards rosettes.
Anniversary Edition
MasterWork
Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Giclée Canvas:
Edition not to exceed 125 and numbered.
37"w x 28"h (unstretched).
$1250
Ask
About Availability
Arriving February 2008
| Also
by Simon Combes |

Arrogance
by Simon Combes
Canvas
|
|
|
|
|