

George Catlin was a self-taught American painter who abandoned a law career to document Native American life on the Great Plains. Between 1830 and 1836 he traveled from St. Louis up the Missouri River and across the southern Plains, visiting fifty tribes and producing more than 500 paintings and sketches. Comanche War Party, Mounted on Wild Horses was painted between 1834 and 1837. Comanche warriors on horseback charge across a green prairie under a wide pink-gray sky, carrying shields and lances, some leaning low to the sides of their horses. A line of trees rises at the right. The figures are small against the landscape, painted quickly in ochres and reds. Catlin's Indian Gallery — the full collection of paintings and artifacts — was donated to the Smithsonian in 1879.

See Also

Étude pour I raro te oviri
Paul Gauguin

Vue sur Antibes
Pierre Bonnard

Three Horses
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

Fauna and Nymphs
André Derain

Fresque
André Derain

Tête d'animal satirique
André Derain

Sea Horse
Raoul Dufy

Twin Lakes, Colorado, Near Leadville
Arthur B. Davies

Flamingos
Paul Altherr

Three Black Horses
Leo Gestel

Storm
Eugène Laermans

Normandy Landscape
Pierre Bonnard

Count Harry Kessler's Family on Horseback
Raoul Dufy

Chevaux et jockeys
Raoul Dufy

Le Bouquet d'arums
Raoul Dufy

Bouquet à la grappe et aux roses
Raoul Dufy

Mountain Landscape
W. Herbert Dunton

Chatter over the New Heir
LaVerne Nelson Black

Untitled (Horse)
Olga Vladimirovna Rozanova

Mythical Animals in a Virgin Forest
Unknown Artist

A Sous-bois Still Life with a Snake
Otto Marseus van Schrieck

Reptiles, Mushrooms and Butterflies
Otto Marseus van Schrieck

Forest Floor Still Life With Snails, A Lizard, A Grasshopper, Moths And A Snake
Johann Falch

Cowboy te Paard
Isaac Israëls

Trees in Alupka
Jan Ciągliński

After the Storm
Jules Bastien-Lepage

Ceylon: Adam's Peak Landscape
Jan Ciągliński

Yalta — Flowers
Jan Ciągliński

River Landscape
Jan Ciągliński

Rain — Impressions from the Train
Jan Ciągliński

Olympia
Jan Ciągliński

Indians Hunting Buffalo
Charles M. Russell

Horse (1937)
Arnold Peter Weisz-Kubínčan

Fehmarnlandschaft
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

Étude De Chevaux
Eugène Delacroix

Horses at Palma
John Singer Sargent

Bus Horses in Jerusalem
John Singer Sargent

The Races at Longchamp
Édouard Manet

Indianer zu Pferd
August Macke

Effet de lumière au cœur d’une tempête en mer
Théodore Gudin

Route en forêt
Raoul Dufy

Chevaux de cirque
Raoul Dufy

Paysage en Provence
Émile Othon Friesz

Landschaft mit Bäumen im Vordergrund
Otto Mueller

Barnyard Fantasy
Arthur Dove

Badende in Landschaft
Otto Mueller

Verdure - Flemish School (17th century)
Unknown Artist

Hudson Valley I
Arthur B. Davies

Twin Lakes, Colorado, Near Leadville
Arthur B. Davies

Sunday Morning Breakfast
Horace Pippin

Supper Time
Horace Pippin

Young Mother
William H. Johnson

Woman Ironing
William H. Johnson

Woman in Calico
William H. Johnson

Swing Low, Sweet Chariot
William H. Johnson

Still Life - Bottles, Jugs, Pitchers
William H. Johnson

Seated Female Nude
William H. Johnson

Portrait
William H. Johnson

Portrait of a Woman in a Rocking Chair
William H. Johnson

Little Girl in Orange
William H. Johnson

Li'l Sis
William H. Johnson

Peter Joe
William H. Johnson

Folk Family
William H. Johnson

Kentucky Sun Quilt (detail)
Unknown Artist

Mountain Landscape
W. Herbert Dunton

Hudson Valley
Arthur B. Davies

Harvest Moon
George Inness

A Silver Morning
George Inness

Gathering for the Chief
LaVerne Nelson Black

Along the Old Trail
LaVerne Nelson Black

Apache at Watering Hole
LaVerne Nelson Black

Chatter over the New Heir
LaVerne Nelson Black

Deux chevaux au pâturage
Edgar Degas

Cowboy te Paard
Isaac Israëls

Buffalo Bull, Grazing on the Prairie
George Catlin

Indians Hunting Buffalo
Charles M. Russell

Indianer zu Pferd
August Macke

Girl in Red Dress with Cat and Dog
Ammi Phillips
Our Process
Every piece in the archive goes through a deliberate process — part historian, part designer, part obsessive.
The thrill of the hunt
We pull from institutional archives, digitized collections, and the deep corners of the art world to find pieces that are both culturally and visually relevent, yet underexplored. We skip the hyper trendy pieces (looking at you, Matisse cutouts) in favor of niche work with a good story.
Context is everything
We dig into the provenance, history, and context around each piece — the artist, the period, the story that makes it worth living with. You don't have to be an art historian to appreciate knowing the who/what/why of a work of art, and it makes it that much more satisfying to live with every day.
Where a scan becomes a print
Institutional scans are often remarkable, but they're also imperfect: color casts from old photography, dust and scratches from the scanning bed, compression artifacts, uneven lighting across a large canvas. What we don't touch is the painting itself — the craquelure, the patina, the brushwork, the small marks of time that make a 200-year-old work look 200 years old. We restore the photograph of the painting, not the painting.
A careful eye
Color is adjusted with restraint. We reference historical materials when possible and avoid over-saturation or heavy-handed edits. The aim is a result that feels balanced, natural, and consistent with how the work was intended to be seen.
We don't do guesswork
Each piece is reviewed at print size to ensure clarity, contrast, and overall quality. Small issues become obvious at scale, so we take the time to catch them before anything is produced.

Common Questions
Giclée (zhee-clay) is a fine art printing process using archival pigment inks on museum-quality paper. The colors are richer, the detail is sharper, and the prints are rated to last 100+ years without fading. It's the same method used by galleries and museums for exhibition-quality reproductions.
All unframed prints are produced on heavyweight, acid-free fine art paper with a subtle matte finish.
Check the size guide on the Print + Frame guide page — it shows all available sizes to scale. General rule: go bigger than you think. For above a sofa, you want the art to be about two-thirds the width of the furniture below it.
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