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Today: November 26. MAN, you all went and did it .... cleared our shelves and storeroom of Trask, ULU, Phelps, Footskins and our other shoes and boots That was the subject of our 3rd"regular" Thursday - short - email. Now comes the 4th email - Thanksgiving day, November 28. Jewelry. Not saying anything else. Just "Jewelry" COME SEE us at the Goodnight Online Distribution Center - the new place - if you are coming by. And thank you all for making HERD WEAR what it is today.
Take a look at "The List" - the separate Collection of super sale stuff - 55% - 85% off a great variety of good products. The New Goodnight "Distribution Center" is open. If you want to come by, call me -817-992-8220 a far in advance as you can! STAY TUNED!

Jack Sorenson Field Study

Sold out
$3,500.00

Jack Sorenson:  

We had a pair ... but one has found a new home.

So,   Oil on board.  12" x 16" and 16" x 12."  This pair was painted back in our bison pasture with two of the Goodnight bison herd as studies. Unframed.  $3500 for this one. 

And Jack was just admitted into the most prestegious Western Artist group - THe Cowboy Artists of America.  Original values have jumped by 10!!

This is a steal!

Though born in 1954, Jack Sorenson grew up living the Old West lifestyle that he now depicts in his work. Coming of age living and working at Six Gun City, a dude ranch and frontier town in the style of the Old West situated on the rim of the Palo Duro Canyon and owned by his father, Sorenson was deeply embedded with a love for the stories and imagery that characterized the Old West, and which continues to motivate him to this day. Whereas other teenagers spent their adolescence working in retail or fast food, Sorenson worked as a stagecoach driver, a performance gunfighter, and a horse trainer. A naturally gifted artist since childhood, Sorenson began painting full-time in 1974. After his first one-man show sold out that same year, Sorenson committed himself to a career in art and never looked back.

 

Jack Sorenson's work has been featured on the covers of more than five dozen western magazines, including Western Horseman, Beef, The Cattleman, The Quarter Horse Journal, and Today's Horse, and feature articles on his work have been published in Southwest Art, Persimmon Hill, Western Horseman and Western Art Collector, among many others. In 1996, Sorenson 's work was picked up by Leanin' Tree Greeting Card Company and he is today one of their best selling artists. In addition, his paintings have been licensed for prints, jig-saw puzzles, and wall hangings. Recognizing the warm and homespun nature of Sorenson's work, Harvest House Publishing has released two books featuring Sorenson's paintings, Everything I Know I Learned From My Grandpa in 2006, and Growing Up Cowboy in 2008. In July of 2009, the Texas Legislature passed a resolution to honor Sorenson "for his professional achievements and extend to him sincere best wishes for continued success and happiness." Today, Sorenson has been immortalized in the same Palo Duro Canyon that was so inspirational to him and instrumental in his development as an artist, by naming in his honor a peak frequently depicted in his artwork- Sorenson Point. Sorenson's work has been featured on the covers of more than five dozen western magazines, including Western Horseman, Beef, The Cattleman, The Quarter Horse Journal, andToday's Horse, and feature articles on his work have been published in Southwest Art, Persimmon Hill, Western Horseman and Western Art Collector, among many others. In 1996, Sorenson 's work was picked up by Leanin' Tree Greeting Card Company and he is today one of their best selling artists. In addition, his paintings have been licensed for prints, jig-saw puzzles, and wall hangings. Recognizing the warm and homespun nature of Sorenson's work, Harvest House Publishing has released two books featuring Sorenson's paintings, Everything I Know I Learned From My Grandpa in 2006, and Growing Up Cowboy in 2008. In July of 2009, the Texas Legislature passed a resolution to honor Sorenson "for his professional achievements and extend to him sincere best wishes for continued success and happiness." Today, Sorenson has been immortalized in the same Palo Duro Canyon that was so inspirational to him and instrumental in his development as an artist, by naming in his honor a peak frequently depicted in his artwork- Sorenson Point.

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