Scouting the Long Knives

by Frank McCarthy
| In
artist Frank McCarthy’s Wild West his subjects often appear as heroes
in action – riding hard, looking good and, inevitably, living to fight
another day. Whatever the subject--Indians, cowboys or cavalry--there is
often a commotion or disturbance going on. Leather flying, guns firing,
sabers slashing through the air, wind tossing horses’ manes – this
is the action packed West of Frank McCarthy.
In Scouting the Long Knives, an Apache is concealed behind an anvil-shaped remnant of an ancient red sandstone formation, spying on a column of cavalry and supply wagons. Known to the Indians as “long knives” because of the long sabers they carried, the U.S. Cavalry patrolled immense areas of the Southwest. Sometimes the patrols were out for weeks at a time, with little or no sight of hostile Indians. But the Indians were always there, scouting the scouters. In a land that seemed so empty, there were always eyes that watched and waited.
|
*Market prices are subject to change daily.