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Jack Van Ryder

Jack Van Ryder (1899 - 1967) was active/lived in Arizona, Montana.  Jack Van Ryder is known for Western genre-fantasy landscape painting.

Biography photo for Jack Van Ryder
Born in Continental, Arizona, Jack Van Ryder was a studio painter of cowboy, Indian and ranch life in Arizona, described in his early years by writers Peggy and Harold Samuels as "an illiterate Arizona wrangler."

In his youth, he went to Montana with a shipment of Mexican steers and remained as a cowboy for many years, but his interest in art led to his becoming a pupil of Charles Russell in Great Falls.  He also learned to read and write and worked in the movies as an extra and painted a relief map of California.

In later years and before 1940, he settled in the Tucson area as a rancher and painter of western subjects, and he also did illustration for Literary Digest, which earned him membership in the Society of Illustrators.

Sources:
Peggy and Harold Samuels, The Illustrated Biographical Encyclopedia of Artists of the American West
Peter Hastings Falk, Editor, Who Was Who in American Art (referencing Who's Who in Ameri   ...  [Displaying 1000 of 5577 characters.]  Artist bio

Artist auction records

.  askART's database currently holds 50 auction lots for Jack Van Ryder (of which 41 auction records sold and 1 are upcoming at auction.)

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.  There are 0 artworks for sale on our website by galleries and art dealers . There are 3 galleries and art dealers listing works of art by Jack Van Ryder as either "Wanted" or "For Sale" .

Research resources

.  askART lists Jack Van Ryder in 0 of its research Essays. Jack Van Ryder has 11 artist signature examples available in our database.

Similar artists

.  There are 24 similar (related) artists for Jack Van Ryder available:    Ross Stefan,  Marjorie Jane Reed,  Warren Eliphalet Rollins,  Joe De Yong,  Will Roderick James,  Olaf Carl Wieghorst,  Edward (John Edward) Borein,  Nick Eggenhofer,  Carl Moon,  Leon Gaspard,  William Bill Gollings,  Maynard Dixon,  Burt Procter,  Frank Tenney Johnson,  Nell Walker (Shostrom) Warner,  Roy Andersen,  Ben (Benjamin) Foster,  Joseph Henry Sharp,  Nicolai Ivanovich Fechin,  Oscar Berninghaus,  Carl Oscar Borg,  Bror Nordfeldt,  Joseph Kleitsch,  Eanger Irving Couse



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Facts about Jack Van Ryder

   Jack Van Ryder  Born:  1899 - Continental, Arizona
Died:   1967
Known for:  Western genre-fantasy landscape painting
Name variants:  Jack VanRyder

Biography from the Archives of askART

Born in Continental, Arizona, Jack Van Ryder was a studio painter of cowboy, Indian and ranch life in Arizona, described in his early years by writers Peggy and Harold Samuels as "an illiterate Arizona wrangler."

In his youth, he went to Montana with a shipment of Mexican steers and remained as a cowboy for many years, but his interest in art led to his becoming a pupil of Charles Russell in Great Falls.  He also learned to read and write and worked in the movies as an extra and painted a relief map of California.

In later years and before 1940, he settled in the Tucson area as a rancher and painter of western subjects, and he also did illustration for Literary Digest, which earned him membership in the Society of Illustrators.

Sources:
Peggy and Harold Samuels, The Illustrated Biographical Encyclopedia of Artists of the American West
Peter Hastings Falk, Editor, Who Was Who in American Art (referencing Who's Who in American Art, 1940)



Biography from SebastianCharles Auctions

Jack Van Ryder (1899–1967) was an American artist renowned for his vivid depictions of the American West. Born on July 7, 1899, in Continental, Arizona, he spent his early years as a cowboy, experiences that deeply influenced his artistic vision. Van Ryder's works, characterized by soft pastels and expansive southwestern skies, capture the essence of cowboy and ranch life. His art gained national recognition, leading to exhibitions across the United States, including a notable solo show at New York's Montross Galleries in 1928. Beyond painting, he illustrated books and magazine covers, contributing significantly to the romanticized imagery of the American frontier.


Biography from Mark Sublette Medicine Man Gallery

Jack van Ryder is one of the most colorful American artists of the twentieth century, with a body of work whose authenticity is unassailable in the face of the life from which his images were culled. A cowboy, painter, illustrator, map-maker, soldier, rancher and Hollywood set designer, Jack van Ryder's talent seemingly knew no bounds.

Born on a goat ranch outside of Tucson, Jack van Ryder was an unhappy child. Stifled by the ranching lifestyle, a thirteen-year-old Jack hopped a train carrying cattle to Montana and, upon arriving, remained there for years working as a ranch hand and, when he could, as a rodeo performer. In his idle moments he sketched the landscape with surprising accuracy for an untrained artist, showing the pieces to his friends along the way. It was in this way that he met the famed artist, writer and early conservationist Charlie Russell. Seeing another authentic Western free spirit led Russell to give Jack van Ryder his first set of paints and encourage him to try his hand at oil painting.

Jack van Ryder's painting was more than adequate almost immediately but, without any sort of specific framework or guidance, he failed to develop a clear and defined personal style. This would change with his inclusion in the group of artists and cartographers who undertook the California map making project of 1926. Jack van Ryder's knowledge of the area being mapped was his main asset to the group at the outset of the project but, by its completion, he would be the leader of the entire expedition and its primary artist.

The style that Jack van Ryder adopted after his return from the map-making project was delicate and precise, a kind of hyper-realism in which the finest details of the landscape and flora of the Arizona desert were tended to with great effort. Rendered in a range of pastel-tinged hues, Jack van Ryder's pieces are serene and vaguely haunting, with a strong dark-light contrast conspiring to cast the foreground in stark relief.

Jack van Ryder's pen and ink pieces were improved, as well, with his work being recognized by the judges at the Brooklyn International Exhibit of Pen and Ink as the most typical and finished of the Western candidates. This success was followed by displays of his work in both ink and oil at the Gainsborough Galleries and the Montross Gallery in New York, a show which he left early in order to compete in the rodeo at Madison Square Garden that night.


Biography from Covington Fine Arts Gallery, Inc.

Born near Tucson, Arizona, Jack Van Ryder was a traditional Western painter, etcher, illustrator and writer, who, at age eleven ran away from home and got a job on a Nevada ranch as a cattle hand.  In 1926 while looking for another line of work, Van Ryder was hired by a Hollywood studio to do stage props.  It was at this time that he decided to take up art.

Even though he was self-taught, VanRyder did receive some instruction from Charles Russell when he was in Montana.  Typical subjects for Van Ryder are desert landscapes and ranch life, especially of the Tucson area where he was a rancher.


Biography from Arizona Committee of the National Museum of Women in the Arts

An article, "Chronicles" by Ann Parker in The Art Book of Arizona outlines a fascinating tale of Jack Van Ryder. Born on a goat ranch near Tucson in 1899, he was given paints by Charles Russell, worked in Hollywood as a set builder, and earned national recognition by selling-out a 1928 one-man show at Montross Galleries in Manhattan, while competing at the rodeo in Madison Square Garden! He saw action in France during WWI, became a pilot, journalist and served in China during WWI. He returned to ranching in Tucson, and art, in his later years; his death in 1967 was from a self-inflicted gunshot wound. He is typically known as a self-taught artist who lived an extraordinarily colorful life, which is reflected in his beautiful, colorful landscapes of Arizona.


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