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Robert Duncan
Robert Duncan was born in Utah and began painting at age
eleven. He spent summers as a boy on his grandparents' ranch in Wyoming where
his grandmother gave him his first set of oil paints. It was there that he grew
to love the country, the open spaces, and the rural lifestyle. Robert has
painted professionally for about 25 years. He studied at the University of Utah
and worked as a commercial artist before his full-time dedication to the fine
art of the American West. Robert was elected into the Cowboy Artists of America
at a young age and won two silver medals in their annual exhibition at the
Phoenix Art Museum - a dream come true. Robert, his wife Linda, their six
children, and a lively assortment of farm animals live in the little town of
Midway in Northern Utah.
"I decided years ago to paint the things that I
cared most about. That decision has brought me a lot of joy and satisfaction and
I'm especially grateful that my family has been such an important part of all of
this."
"I grew up in the suburbs, but every chance I got, I would sneak
out to nearby fields to watch the birds or play in the creek, and the summers I
spent on my granddad's ranch really taught me how much we all need Nature in our
lives. But change is all around us. The family farm is disappearing at an
alarming rate. Development and sprawl cover fertile fields by the minute. I want
my grandchildren to be able to walk through a field and hear a meadowlark call.
We don't all have to live on a farm, but to pass by and see the cows grazing or
just to know that there are wild places being kept wild makes our lives better.
Ina way, my paintings are a call to think about the things that have touched our
lives and hope that we might all be willing to do our part to save these things
for future generations."
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