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Veryl
Goodnight
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"Childhood Friends"
Bronze
16" H x 19" L x 13" W
$4,200
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"Passing Times"
Bronze
18" H x 22" L x 15" W
$6,200
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"Spring and Sprite"
Bronze
Spring: 8' H x 10' L x 28" W
Sprite: 5'6" H x 5'6" L x 24" W
Spring: $78,000
Sprite: $24,000
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"Privileged Lady"
Bronze
25" H x 22" L x 12" W
$4,600
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"Running The Chapparal"
Bronze, 27" H x 27" L x 17" W
Edition: 25
$10,000
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Veryl
Goodnight has been sculpting since 1973. She is one of today's best
known sculptors of Western and animal subjects in bronze. Descended
from Charles Goodnight, the legendary Texas cattle baron, Veryl's
work reflects the American West and highlights the pioneer ideal.
Raised
near Denver, Veryl's formal artistic training was greatly influenced
by the beauty and freedom of Colorado's Rocky Mountain wildlife
and her keen interest in horses. As a child, she was only able
to dream of having a horse of her own. This yearning became the
impetus for her art, filling her with a passion to draw horses
and even sculpt them in snow.
Many
of Veryl's monuments are in museums and public collections throughout
the United States, Europe and Japan. Paint Mare and Filly,
commissioned by the American Paint Horse Association, was dedicated
at the Cowboy Hall of Fame in Oklahoma City in 1988. It was awarded
Best of Show by the American Acacemy of Equine Art in 1986. The
Lely Resort in Naples, Florida commissioned The Freedom Horses,
which depicts five over life size running horses.
Her
largest work to date, The Day The Wall Came Down, a monument
to freedom, portrays five over life size horses jumping over
the rubble of the collapsed Berlin Wall. There are two castings
of this monument, one located at the George Bush Presidential
Library and the "sister" casting is on display at the Allied
Museum in Berlin, Germany. Each sculpture is 30 feet long, 18
feet wide and 12 feet high and weighs approximately 7 tons.
Veryl
has been featured in all major American art magazines, and exhibits
in prestigious shows, such as Artists of America, Great American
Artists, Masters of the American West, Cheyenne Governor's Invitational
and the Northwest Rendezvous. She maintains membership in the
National Sculpture Society, Society of Animal Artists, Artists
of America, Northwest Rendezvous and the American Academy of
Equine Art.
She
is a sought after instructor of equine sculpture, and teaches
once a year at the Scottsdale Artists' School and the Fechin
Institute in Taos, New Mexico.
She
lives just north of Santa Fe, New Mexico with her husband Roger
Brooks and their menagerie of animals. Their favorite pastime
is riding their horses through the surrounding mountains and
arroyos.
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