William Robinson Leigh, G. Harvey and Alexander Proctor illuminate the American Frontier at Heritage
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William Robinson Leigh, G. Harvey and Alexander Proctor illuminate the American Frontier at Heritage
William Robinson Leigh (American, 1866-1955), Rabbit Hunt, 1944. Oil on canvas, 16 x 26 in. Estimate: $120,000 - $180,000.



DALLAS, TX.- Few sculptures embody the spirit of Western art as completely as Alexander Phimister Proctor’s Oregon Pioneer Mother (1929), a highlight of Heritage’s Western Art: Visions of the American Frontier Signature® Auction taking place Nov. 7.

Commissioned in 1929 by Burt Brown Barker to honor his mother, Elvira Brown Barker, who traveled the Oregon Trail as a child in 1852, Oregon Pioneer Mother transcends private memorialization to become a universal meditation on endurance and dignity. Barker envisioned a monument not to hardship but to the strength and serenity that follows it. “Others have perpetuated her struggles,” Barker wrote. “I want to perpetuate the peace which followed her struggles.”

Proctor, already celebrated as the “Sculptor in Buckskin” for his authentic depictions of frontier life, responded with a design that distilled those ideals into timeless form. The seated mother, captured in a moment of quiet contemplation, exudes grace and fortitude. Her hands rest gently in her lap as she marks her place in a book, her gaze turned downward in thought — an image not of toil or conquest, but of reflection and continuity.

Born in Canada in 1860 and raised in Denver, Proctor studied at the National Academy of Design and the Académie Julian in Paris before achieving renown for monumental works that shaped America’s visual identity. His legacy includes the Theodore Roosevelt Rough Rider statue in Portland, On the War Trail in Denver’s Civic Center Park, the Princeton Tigers at Princeton’s Nassau Hall and The Mustangs at the University of Texas among many other familiar favorites. Yet Oregon Pioneer Mother stands apart for its stillness and a quiet strength that anchors his career’s final chapter.

When the full-size monument was unveiled at the University of Oregon in 1932, it was hailed by President Herbert Hoover as a work that “memorializes the spirit which made possible the journey, the peace which followed her struggles and the joy which consummated her victory.” The sculpture soon became an Oregon landmark, celebrated for its humanity and its faith in endurance.

Nearly a century later, the Oregon Pioneer Mother continues to resonate both as a masterwork of American sculpture and as a touchstone for evolving conversations about history and remembrance. Its narrative has expanded beyond Barker’s original tribute to encompass broader reflections on memory, migration and the complexities of settlement. “This sculpture invites dialogue,” says Alissa Ford, Heritage Auctions’ Director of Western Art. “Proctor’s art captures not just the pioneering past, but the ongoing conversation about how we define courage, sacrifice and the American story itself.”

The bronze offered by Heritage traces directly to Barker’s own collection, passing through generations of his family before being consigned by his great-grandson in 2024. Its exquisite dark brown patina and fine modeling underscore Proctor’s unmatched ability to balance realism with symbolic depth.

Masters and Modern Voices of the American Frontier

The Nov. 7 auction also brings together more than a century of Western imagery, from the heroic vision of the frontier to contemporary reinterpretations of its meaning.

Among the historic highlights is William Robinson Leigh’s Rabbit Hunt (1944), a vibrant oil painting that captures the kinetic energy and immediacy that made Leigh one of the most accomplished chroniclers of frontier life. A master of detail and color, Leigh infuses the composition with a sense of narrative urgency. Oscar E. Berninghaus’s The Tranquility of Taos, an intimate oil on canvas laid on board, exemplifies the lyrical quietude of the Taos Society of Artists. Berninghaus’ rendering of light and atmosphere turns a simple moment into an enduring evocation of the Southwest’s sublime beauty.

On the contemporary side, G. Harvey’s The Blowout (1980) glows with the romantic luminosity that defined his career. Bathed in the golden light of dusk, the painting captures the nostalgic pulse of a bustling, oil-rich Western town, a moment suspended between history and myth.

Fellow contemporary Western masters Martin Grelle and Ed Mell add range and vitality to the sale. Grelle’s First Things First (1981) honors the traditions of ranching life through grounded realism, while Mell’s Renewal (2001) reflects the sculptural abstraction and saturated color that have made his modernist interpretations of the desert Southwest instantly recognizable.

A special section of the auction is dedicated to the acclaimed sculptor Dave McGary, whose powerful bronze Bear’s Nest (1994), standing more than seven feet tall, exemplifies his fusion of technical precision and cultural reverence. McGary’s deeply researched bronze portrayals of Native life and ceremony offer an unmatched sense of presence and respect, and the auction includes 11 of his works, spanning the full breadth of his remarkable career.

Contemporary Native American artists are also prominently featured, including Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Earl Biss and John Nieto, whose Hunting Alone (1978) stands as a vivid example of his signature electric palette and psychological intensity. Together, these artists reimagine the Western narrative not as a closed chapter of American myth, but as a living conversation about identity, place and resilience.

“Visions of the American Frontier reminds us that the West is more than geography. It’s a state of mind,” Ford says. “This auction captures the full spectrum of that idea, from Proctor’s quiet reverence to the bold innovation of artists who are redefining what Western art means today.”










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