Skip to main content

Roy Andersen Art

b. 1930

Roy Andersen did paintings of Crow, Cheyenne and Apache Indians. He began his career living in Chicago and New York and working as an illustrator. He did numerous covers for Time Magazine including portraits of Albert Einstein and Prince Fahd. He also did illustrations for National Geographic magazine and did a stamp series on Dogs and American Horses, and in 1984 and 1985, won the Stamp of the Year Award. As a muralist, he has filled commissions for the National Park Service, the Royal Saudi Naval Headquarters, and the E.E. Fogelson Visitor Center at Pecos National Monument in New Mexico. To pursue his talent for painting, Roy Anderson went West, living in Arizona and settling in Cave Creek. In 1990, he was voted official artist for Scottsdale's Parada del Sol, the "world's largest" horse-drawn parade commemorating the Old West. Andersen grew up on an apple farm in New Hampshire and learned about Indian customs from his many hours spent at the Chicago Museum of Natural History. He is meticulous about being historically accurate in his paintings. Of him, it was written: "There are no 'happy accidents' in an Andersen painting. He has a knowledge of his subject that is attained only through extensive research. You will not find an Apache medicine bag around a Sioux warrior's neck nor a Cheyenne carrying a rifle that is a bit too modern. What you will see is accuracy, an almost uncanny sense of composition and color harmony and a strength of drawing that is remarkable." His training is from the Chicago Academy of Fine Art and the Art Center School of Los Angeles. Influenced by a cowboy uncle from Nebraska, he often painted cowboy scenes that his art teachers said were passe. For 30 years, he was an illustrator for National Geographic, Time magazine and Sports Illustrated and lived in New York and Chicago. And then he went West looking for peace and a place where he could be his own man in both his life and his art. He lived in Arizona and Texas. In 1989, Andersen was voted into membership into the Cowboy Artists of America, a group from whom he has received recognition at the annual exhibitions: Oil Painting Award, Silver, 1999 and Drawing and Other Media, Silver, 2000.

1
1
1
Overall Height
to
Overall Width
to
1
1
1
1
1
1
6,952
3,302
2,514
1,213
1
1
1
1
Artist: Roy Andersen
Old High Country Woman
By Roy Andersen
Located in Missouri, MO
Roy Andersen (b. 1930) "Old High Country Woman" Oil on Canvas 12 x 16 inches 21.5 x 25 inches framed Known as a western painter, Roy Andersen did paintings of Crow, Cheyenne, and Apache Indians. He began his career living in Chicago and New York and working as an illustrator. He did numerous covers for Time Magazine including portraits of Albert Einstein and Prince Fahd. He also did illustrations for National Geographic magazine, and did a stamp series on Dogs and American Horses, and in 1984 and 1985, won Stamp of the Year Award. As a muralist, he has filled commissions for the National Park Service, the Royal Saudi Naval Headquarters, and the E.E. Fogelson Vistor Center at Pecos National Monument in New Mexico. To pursue his talent for painting, Roy Anderson went West, living in Arizona and settling in Cave Creek. In 1990, he was voted official artist for Scottsdale's Parada del Sol, the "world's largest" horse-drawn parade commemorating the Old West. Andersen grew up on an apple farm in New Hampshire and learned about Indian customs from his many hours spent at the Chicago Museum of Natural History. He is meticulous about being historically accurate in his paintings. Of him it was written: "There are no 'happy accidents' in an Andersen painting. He has a knowledge of his subject that is attained only through extensive research. You will not find an Apache medicine bag...
Category

Late 20th Century American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Related Items
While The Tide is Out, Provincetown
By Alexis Jean Fournier
Located in Milford, NH
A fine impressionist painting on the shore of Cape Cod with cottages, boats, and figures by American artist Alexis Jean Fournier (1865-1948). Fournier was born on the fourth of July ...
Category

Early 20th Century American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Oil, Canvas

In the Garden, 10x8" oil on board
By Lu Haskew
Located in Loveland, CO
In the Garden by Lu Haskew Oil Painting of woman with an umbrella in a backyard garden 10x8" image size 14x12" framed Shipping price includes the custom packing necessary for safe t...
Category

Early 2000s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Board

Carmel Valley Gardener Landscape
By Ray Barton
Located in Soquel, CA
Painting of a Carmel Valley Gardener by Ray Barton (American, 1918-1988). Ray Barton specialized in plein air paintings of Carmel Valley and Pacific Grov...
Category

1980s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Koloa, Kauai, Hawaii Lilac Trees Landscape
By Katherine O. Baldwin
Located in Soquel, CA
Wonderful impressionistic landscape painting of Koloa, on the Island of Kauai, Hawaii by Katherine O. Baldwin (American, 20th Century), 1971. Signed and dated lower right and titled ...
Category

1970s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Mid Century Figurative Landscape with Red Barn & Yellow Tree
Located in Soquel, CA
Charming mid century figurative landscape of a man walking along a pathway to a red barn with multi-colored trees along side by M. House. Signed "M. House" lower left. Presented in a...
Category

1960s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Cardboard

Impressionist view of people in St. Marks Square in Venice
By Pam Masco
Located in Woodbury, CT
Wonderful Impressionist view of St. Marks Square, Venice. Pam Masco was an American from Massachusetts, and a graduate of the School of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts (1976). She was married to the English artist John Heseltine. Her work is in well-known private and corporate collections and has been shown at the Royal Society of British Artists, the Royal Watercolour Society and other London Galleries as well as in the Provinces. She travelled throughout the U.S.A. and Europe and painted American and European subjects, portraits, landscape and figure compositions, still life and interiors. From 1978 she was involved in drawing, painting, technical painting courses, watercolour and graphic design. She illustrated for major British and American publishers until 1988. Authors include Bruce Chatwin...
Category

Early 2000s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Waterways (Lysekil, Sweden), 1930s Large Framed Seascape Landscape Oil Painting
By Carl Lindin
Located in Denver, CO
Waterways is an original 1920s-1930s signed framed oil painting of sailboats in off the coast of Lysekil, Sweden by Swedish-American Woodstock artist, Carl Lindin (1869-1942). Prese...
Category

1920s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Morning Sunrise, Mid Century Laguna Hills Figurative Landscape
Located in Soquel, CA
Beautiful mid century plein air figural landscape of Laguna Niguel, California by an unknown artist (American, 20th Century). The morning sun gli...
Category

1950s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Cardboard, Oil, Canvas

Summer Fun, 12x14" oil on board
By Lu Haskew
Located in Loveland, CO
Summer Fun by Lu Haskew Oil Painting of kids at play on the beach 12x14.5" image size 15x18.5" framed Shipping price includes the custom packing necessary for safe transport of fine...
Category

Early 2000s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Board

Mid Century Boat Docks Pacific Grove Landscape
Located in Soquel, CA
Painterly scene of boats and boats being built at the docks in old Pacific Grove, California by an unknown artist (American, 20th Century). Signed"WHM" lower left. Presented in a fau...
Category

1950s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Cardboard

Afternoon Swim, Mid Century Figurative Landscape
By H. Milton Snyder
Located in Soquel, CA
Afternoon swim, a lovely mid century figurative landscape, by California artist, Henry Milton Snyder (American, 1915-1966). Presented in a giltwood frame. Signed "H. Milton Snyder" l...
Category

1940s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Evening - New York - Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting by Johann Berthelsen
By Johann Berthelsen, 1883-1972
Located in Marlow, Buckinghamshire
Stunning oil on canvas circa 1955 by American impressionist painter Johann Henrik Carl Berthelsen. The piece depicts a view of the illuminated waterfront buildings from the East Rive...
Category

1950s American Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Previously Available Items
"Warrior" NATIVE AMERICAN INDIAN AWESOME
By Roy Andersen
Located in San Antonio, TX
Roy Andersen (1930-2019) Arizona / Texas Artist Image Size: 11 x 7.5 Frame: 21 x 17.5 Medium: Watercolor "Warrior" Biography Roy Andersen (1930-2019) Arizona / Texas Artist In Roy Andersen’s The Medicine Pony, a Crow warrior stands in front of his white pony, holding a horse dance stick after a late afternoon rain. The man gazes toward the horizon while two other Indians wait behind him on their mounts. Painted on the white pony’s neck are symbols of dragonflies, which to the Crow people were messengers from the spirit world that carried dreams to individual warriors. “I was pretty proud of the piece,” Andersen, 82, says from his studio in Kerrville, Texas. “Some of them you struggle through, and sometimes they just paint themselves. Those are the ones that are really fun. This one went along the way I wanted.” Authenticity is a hallmark of Andersen’s work. “I always like to try to get a little weather in my paintings,” he says of the sinking sun and afternoon rain in The Medicine Pony. The model for the white horse was a saddle horse Andersen used to own. He still uses the paint horses he raises as models. “I don’t know how many I have,” he admits. “I guess 25 or so.” Andersen also bought two longhorn steers to serve as models. “They’re pretty much pets,” he says. “I call them Gus and Woodrow, after [the characters in] Lonesome Dove.” Growing up on a New Hampshire apple farm, Andersen had dreams of his own: “I wanted to grow up to be an Indian,” he says, “but found out that was a job I couldn’t get.” Another dream was to be an artist. “Nobody in my family had ever been that, and my parents said, ‘If that’s what he wants to be, well, we’ll try to help him.’ My father thought that I wasn’t strong enough to be a farmer and certainly not smart enough to be a carpenter, so if I wanted to be a painter, that was all right.” Andersen studied at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts and the Art Center School of Los Angeles, then became a professional illustrator, his work gracing National Geographic, Time and Sports Illustrated, as well as movie posters. His favorite poster was for Clint Eastwood’s The Outlaw Josey Wales (1976). “My wife was my agent then—she still is,” Andersen says. “I always told her that was my favorite job she ever got me.” Living on the East Coast might have been good for a magazine illustrator, but Andersen’s heart belonged out West. “I was about 15 when I discovered The Field Museum in Chicago had all these cases of Indian artifacts,” he says. “I’d go down there drawing and sketching. I don’t know why, but I was always fascinated. My family’s all from Denmark, and my mother’s brother was the first to come over. His first job in the United States was a cowboy in Nebraska.” Eventually, Andersen moved to Arizona, first Sedona—“The sunlight bouncing off those red rocks will screw a painting up faster than anything,” the painter recalls —and then Cave Creek. But the climate was hard on the horses he raises, so he moved to Kerrville. That was about 12 years ago. Typically, Andersen will work on two or three paintings at the same time. “One on the easel, and two half-started,” he says. His inspiration comes from various sources. “Sometimes [a painting will] cook for a while,” he says. “I have sketchbooks, and I’ll scribble in there. Sometimes it’s a landscape I’ve seen and think that would be neat. I have a ton of books here, and I try to go to every museum that has Indian artifacts. I’ve collected some of my own and have had replicas made; they don’t cost as much as the real thing.” Andersen stresses the importance of good research. “I love to do research. I guess that’s one of the reasons I hit it off with Geographic. I did a few Indian things—the first men in America, the Anasazi, and a thing on the Mayans. Course, I did space things and dinosaurs and everything else. But the Indian stuff is my main stuff.” Source: History Online and Daily Times Obituaries Submitted by: Ande Rasmussen Photo of Roy Andersen Known as a western painter, Roy Andersen did paintings of Crow, Cheyenne, and Apache Indians. He began his career living in Chicago and New York and working as an illustrator. He did numerous covers for Time Magazine including portraits of Albert Einstein and Prince Fahd. He also did illustrations for National Geographic magazine, and did a stamp series on Dogs and American Horses, and in 1984 and 1985, won Stamp of the Year Award. As a muralist, he has filled commissions for the National Park Service, the Royal Saudi Naval Headquarters, and the E.E. Fogelson Vistor Center at Pecos National Monument in New Mexico. To pursue his talent for painting, Roy Anderson went West, living in Arizona and settling in Cave Creek. In 1990, he was voted official artist for Scottsdale's Parada del Sol, the "world's largest" horse-drawn parade commemorating the Old West. Andersen grew up on an apple farm in New Hampshire and learned about Indian customs from his many hours spent at the Chicago Museum of Natural History. He is meticulous about being historically accurate in his paintings. Of him it was written: "There are no 'happy accidents' in an Andersen painting. He has a knowledge of his subject that is attained only through extensive research. You will not find an Apache medicine bag...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Impressionist Roy Andersen Art

Materials

Watercolor

Roy Andersen art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Roy Andersen art available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Roy Andersen in canvas, fabric, oil paint and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 20th century and is mostly associated with the Impressionist style. Not every interior allows for large Roy Andersen art, so small editions measuring 25 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Greg Harris, Ralph Edward Joosten, and Erik Freyman.

Artists Similar to Roy Andersen

Recently Viewed

View All