This small framed print is from the artist Rudolph Carl (RC) Gorman (1931-2005), who has been called both the "Picasso of American Indian Artists (NY Times) and the "Picasso of the Southwest". Mr Gorman was a member of the Navajo nation whose primary subject matter focused on the "common woman who smells of fields and maize. My women work and walk on the land. They need to be strong to survive" and "I like to think that my women represent a universal woman"
Quotes taken from the RCGormanArt.Com 2012 artist biography page.
This is a framed print by Rudolph Carl Gorman entitled 1976 "Woman with Conchos". It is representitive of the fluid forms, vibrant colors and big hands and feet favored by the artist. It is not numbered and is probably a reproduced print with signature and 1976 in the bottom left corner. It is matted and framed and under glass, with a new backing and hanging hardware put on in December 2021. The frame is sliver metal with red paint throughout and some cosmetic frame damage (chipping) to the bottom left surface, the frame damage is not structural. Wire hanging hardware, hanging weight 1lb, 6oz. Framed 10.75x9, image 5x7.
RC Gorman| Woman with Conchos| Lithograph Print
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