Blake, Buckeye

Buckeye Blake was well known for painting great scenery for Hollywood film studios. In Nevada, he was well respected for his work on construction sites, ranches and sign-painting jobs. Back home in Carson City, his relatives wondered if he was going to follow in his great-grandfather’s footsteps and become a great breeder of quarterhorses, whether he was going to keep his father’s tradition of being a great rodeo rider or be like his mother and become an artist.  It was the latter that finally claimed Buckeye, named after a city in Arizona. After his family passed through Buckeye on the rodeo circuit, the nickname stuck, somehow fitting this wandering Westerner. Still, even though he had chosen an occupation, the versatile experimenter was not going to approach it in a commonplace manner. He worked in a variety of mediums, often painting several versions of the same image, one in oil, one in pen and ink and one in watercolor.

Loading...