Bruce Greene's
Works
Bruce
Greene is a Western painter who has ridden trails and experienced
the cowboy life he portrays in the very narrative images
he creates. The artist is a native Texan who has reached
the pinnacle of his profession through hard work and an
extraordinary talent for painting the story of one of our
country’s most revered icons, the American cowboy.
His scenes of contemporary cowboys going about their daily
work are admired and collected across America.
Several years ago, Bruce began making annual trips to join
in the spring work on the legendary JA Ranch in the Palo
Duro Canyon of north Texas. As Greene describes his trip,
“I go up there and stay on the chuck wagon with the
JA hands and the neighbors that have come to help. We ride
a lot of miles in rough country. It can be cold, hot, windy,
and wet. As a matter of fact, it can be all of these in
one day. A fella' could get lost in some of the mesquite
or cedar thickets. Of course, we work a few cows on our
place and help out a neighbor now and then, but the JA trip
has been a real inspiration for me each year. I am absolutely
sure that this experience has greatly affected my artwork.
It seems necessary, to me, in order to depict the contemporary
cowboy with accuracy and feeling. My good friend, Red Steagall,
calls it ‘getting the dust in your nose.’ For
me, that dust makes the difference.”
One of Greene’s most enjoyable, recent projects was
creating a painting for the Texas Rangers Association Foundation
commemorating and honoring the history and high standards
of the Texas Rangers. The painting, titled “The Ranger
Code,” was purchased by members of the Foundation’s
board and is in the permanent collection of outstanding
Ranger art at the Texas Ranger Museum in Waco.
Greene was elected to membership in the prestigious Cowboy
Artists of America in 1993 and served as its President in
2003.
The artist and his family live on a small ranch in the historical
community of Norse, near Clifton, Texas. Greene’s
studio sets on the edge of a hill behind his home. From
this vantage point, large north windows offer a continuous
view of the Texas Hill Country, a few Hereford cows, and
the occasional whitetail deer. “It is a wonderful
blessing to be able to make a living for my family doing
what I love in this beautiful place,” says Greene.
Greene’s works are represented by several well known
galleries in the Southwest. He has presented his art in
annual shows and exhibition such as the Cowboy Artists of
America Exhibition, the Prix de West Show at the National
Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum, and the Autry Museum
of Western Heritage Sale, just to name a few, and other
prestigious venues.
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