|   |   Oil on canvas26 inches x 41 inches
 Although Russell was not much of a cowpuncher himself, he  admired his friends who were top hands and watched them as they went about  their daily business.  Many of Russell’s  paintings isolated the cowboy and horse in an elemental contest.  He enjoyed creating complicated,  story-telling pictures that allowed the action to unfold before the viewer.
   | 
      
        |   |   Oil on canvas24 1/8 inches x 36 1/8 inches
 This action painting of Utica’s main street  was commissioned in 1907 by Charles Lehman’s sons.  Although the Lehman store in Utica had  already closed, the painting was used to advertise the Lehmans’ Lewistown  store.  In the painting, Charlie Russell,  himself, leans against the hitching post while Charles Lehman lounges in the  doorway.
 | 
      
        |   |   In Grubpile, the solitary Cree seems  oblivious to the activity around him as he finds solace with each puff on his  pipe.  Indians made smoking into a ritual  and, in some cultures, a part of religious practice.  In this painting the blanket-wrapped figure  is seated beside his small fire and his temporary shelter.  While Russell was known for his ability to  paint action, in many cases his Indian pictures revealed a more contemplative  side. | 
      
        |   |   Watercolor, pencil & gouache on paper16 1/4 inches x 12 1/4 inches
 Russell had a knack for capturing a horse  in motion. He could twist a man or animal anyway he chose for the purpose of  action.  The vertical composition of this  painting heightens its visual impact, emphasizing the towering height of the  horse and rider as they crowd the edges of the painting.
 |