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Born in Redlands, California, Don Crowley got started in the
world of art at such an early age that he couldnt remember
a time when he wasnt drawing.
During his school years in Santa Ana, he read everything
he could about art and spent every spare moment developing
his skill. Service in the Merchant Marines and the Navy enabled
Crowley to enroll in the Art Center School of Design in Los
Angeles under the G.I. Bill. Five years later, he moved to
New York and began a successful career in commercial illustration.
After more than twenty years in the Northeast, Crowley felt
restricted by the narrow range of his commercial work and
began to work more extensively in fine art. In 1973, he accepted
an invitation to exhibit his paintings at a gallery in Arizona.
He was so taken by the area that he decided to continue his
career there.
With his family, Crowley settled in the Southwest, where
he began forging a relationship with a group of Native Americans.
Although he is recognized and respected for many different
kinds of paintings, he is best known for his sensitive and
skilled portraits of these Apache and Paiute women and children.
Crowley visits the San Carlos Reservation annually to continue
chronicling the lives of his subjects. I hope that my
work expresses the beauty and dignity of these very special
people, he says. Through Crowleys work, his collectors
have watched his subjects grow over the years. Occasionally
youll see a rare Don Crowley image of a cowboy or a
cattle drive, but what he is best known for are handsome,
clear portraits of Native American women and children, not
to mention their colorful Pendleton blankets. In fact, long-time
collectors of his work may see the same subject as both a
girl and woman, wearing the colorful, geometric-patterned
blanket that was handed down from generation to generation.
In 1995, he was elected to the Cowboy Artists of America
and, in his first year, won the CA Gold Medal for Drawing.
The following year he was awarded four awards: a Gold Medal
for Oil, Silver Medal for Drawing, the CA Award and the Kieckhefer
Best in Show Award. With customary dry humor, Crowley termed
this accomplishment very encouraging.
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