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Prints, Drawings, and Photographs

Whiteface Cattle, Texas

Made in Texas, South, United States, North and Central America

1935

Howard Norton Cook, American, 1901 - 1980

Transparent and opaque watercolor and dry brush with scraping out over traces of graphite on off-white wove paper
Sheet: 15 15/16 x 22 7/8 inches (40.5 x 58.1 cm)

Currently not on view

1973-12-410

Purchased with the Lola Downin Peck Fund from the Carl and Laura Zigrosser Collection, 1973

Label

The printmaker and muralist Howard Cook held a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1934-35 that enabled him to tour the Deep South for a year to study the essential characters of the working poor in out-of-the-way areas of the United States. He lived among and drew farmers, miners, steelworkers, craftsmen, and cowboys. This watercolor is dated to the time of his stay in South Texas, where he described the local cattlemen as "physical giants equaling in grandeur the vast country to which they belong as essentially as the mesquite and prickly pear that cover their desert."

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