Charles M. Russell

Discover the mastery of the legendary cowboy artist

When Mules Wear Diamonds (1921) by Charles M. Russell (1864-1926)National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

Charles Russell's West

Every day activities were the subject of Russell's work, especially working cowboys who were toiling in the new frontier. When Mules Wear Diamonds, Charles M. Russell (1864-1926), 1921, From the collection of the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

In 1897, a few months after Charlie Russell married Nancy Cooper, the editor of Western Field and Stream made a visit to the young couple’s Montana home and studio. He was impressed, and wrote in the August 1897 issue, "Mr. Russell is not only a painter, he is an artistic genius, and his modeling in wax is almost as great a surprise and delight as are his pictures’ [His] work needs only to become more widely distributed."

Charles M. Russell: The Cowboy Artist (2015) by National Cowboy & Western Heritage MuseumNational Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

Russell: The Cowboy Artist

Charles Russell's background as a working cowboy made his work unique among Western artists.

Meat for Wild Men (1929) by Charles M. Russell (1864 1926)National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

Russell, the multimedia artist

Sculpture was another medium that Russell used to tell the action of the West, like this creation, Meat for Wild Men, Charles M. Russell (1864-1926), 1929, From the collection of the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

Born into a prosperous St. Louis, Missouri, family, Russell was a poor academic student, who spent his time drawing and sculpting animals out of clay and wax. As a teenager, Russell moved to northwestern Montana where he worked as a hunter, trapper and night wrangler on cattle outfits. By the turn of the century, his experiences became the subjects of his paintings, illustrations, letters, sculptures and books.

Smoke Talk (1924) by Charles M. Russell (1864 1926)National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

Smoke Talk

Russell's painting of Native Americans was done in 1924, but recalled an earlier time on the frontier.

Red Man's Wireless (1916) by Charles M. Russell (1864-1926)National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

Red Man's Wireless

Russell strived to depict accurately the dress, culture and appearance of the Native Americans of the Plains.

Charles Russell at easel working on The Signal Glass (Red Man's Wireless) (1916) by Charles RussellNational Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

Charles Russell in his studio

This image depicts Western art legend Charles Russell in his studio, where he transformed his experiences into art.

Russell’s folksy persona and years in the saddle were the source of numerous claims for veracity in his art. Russell longed for the idyllic past, especially the pre‑reservation period when, as his titles suggest, buffalo were “monarchs of the plains” and “wild men” lived at one with the land. His adoption of a buffalo skull for his insignia reiterates that. As Russell noted in a 1926 letter: "An old (Indian) told me once that real good brave men lived in their hearts, not their heads..."

Wildman's Truce (1914) by Charles M. Russell (1864 1926)National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

Russell longed for an idyllic past

Living in Montana gave Russell a sense of the past and the present, as well as what life could be like in the West. 
Wildman's Truce, Charles M. Russell (1864-1926), 1914, From the collection of: National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

Come Find Your West at The National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

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Created by The Staff of the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum

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The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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