Frank P. Sauerwein
Frank P. Sauerwein
Squaw and Papoose #1
- Watercolor & gouache on paper
- Paper: 10 high x 12 wide
- Unframed
- Signed lower left, dated 1902
Click image to enlarge.
PRICE: Sold
About the work
The painting was executed in 1902, the same year that Sauerwein created his illustrations for U. S. Hollister’s book “The Navajo and His Blanket.”
The female subject is wrapped in a Navajo first phase chief blanket, which was very expensive even for the day. The colors in the watercolor are brilliant.
About the artist…
During his relatively short life of thirty-nine years, Frank Paul Sauerwein (1871-1910) became a specialist of western scene painting, including Southwest Indians in their landscape. Had he not died in 1910, he may have become the seventh founding member of the Taos Society of Artists.
Sauerwein grew to love Arizona, staying at El Tovar Hotel at the South Rim of the Grand Canyon, and in 1900 on the Navajo Reservation. He was a close friend of Lorenzo Hubbell, well-known trading post operator at Ganado, Arizona. Sauerwein also spent a considerable amount of time at Keams Canyon in northeast Arizona, where he sketched Navajo and Hopi Indians.
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