The George G. Matthews Collection of Western Art

Page 40

PAUL CALLE 1928 - 2010 Born in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, Paul Calle earned an undergraduate degree from the Pratt Institute. During the Korean War Calle served as an Army illustrator, and following the War he illustrated covers for science fiction magazines such as, Galaxy, Fantasy Fiction, and Super Science Stories, as well as general interest magazines like The Saturday Evening Post.

as a fine artist grew rapidly due to his accurate and beautiful paintings of fur traders and mountain men. Calle spent a great deal of time in the field studying details of wildlife and the natural environment, often with the Northwest Rendezvous Group of Artists, of which he was a founding member. Noteworthy is the fact that the Northwest Rendezvous Group of Artists is credited with inventing the “quick draw” that has become so popular among art venues and Western art museums across the country.

In 1962 Paul Calle was one of eight artists selected to participate in the NASA Art Program, documenting the space program through paintings and drawings. His career as an artist for NASA spanned more than 40 years, covering the Mercury, Gemini, Apollo, and Space Shuttle Missions. Among the art produced early on by Calle for the space program were the first “twin” stamps produced by the U.S. Postal Service, which commemorated the first American spacewalk of 1965 (issued in 1967) and the Apollo 11 moon landing in 1969. When the Apollo 11 astronauts lifted off, among the things they carried was a die of Calle’s commemorative “First Man on the Moon” stamp. When they landed on the moon a proof was made from the die and hand-canceled by the crew, Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin and Michael Collins. Interestingly, 150 billion copies of the “First Man on the Moon” stamp were printed and sold, making Calle the most reproduced artist in history and his artwork for the stamp the most widely purchased artwork in the world.

Calle typically began his day at 8:30am working in his Connecticut studio, a converted hay loft in an old barn, where he would work for 10 hours a day at least five days a week. The final preparation for each of his paintings involved first producing a detailed full-size pencil drawing. Calle was known for the quality of his pencil drawings and wrote what some consider one of the best books on pencil drawing, titled simply, The Pencil. Two quotes seem to best describe how Calle reconciled his diverse career as an artist. “For me, the dimensions of art can be as vast as the wild, windswept plains of the West, as infinite as outer space and as small as the historical scenes captured on postage stamps.” And, “To me there’s always been a similarity, a oneness, between that booted foot of Neil Armstrong sinking into the dust of the moon and the moccasin foot of mountain men, like John Colter, sinking into the snow of the Yellowstone River Valley. They were both establishing a new frontier at the edge of each new footstep.”

When Paul Calle was named Chairman of the Department of Interior’s “Artist in the Parks” program it sparked his interest in the history of the American West and led to his decision to enter the field of fine art as a Western artist. Calle’s reputation

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Hubert Wackermann

2min
pages 254-259

Richard D. Thomas

2min
pages 248-253

John Paul Strain

2min
pages 242-243

Karl Thomas

2min
pages 246-247

Lyle Tayson

2min
pages 244-245

Ron Stewart

1min
pages 238-241

Oleg Stavrowsky

2min
pages 234-237

Don Spaulding

1min
pages 226-227

Gene Speck

2min
pages 228-233

Irvin Shope

2min
pages 224-225

William Steve Seltzer

1min
pages 222-223

David Sanders

2min
pages 214-217

Alfredo Rodriguez

3min
pages 204-211

William Rushing

1min
pages 212-213

Conrad Schwiering

1min
pages 218-219

Gary Lynn Roberts

3min
pages 198-203

Olaf Carl Seltzer

2min
pages 220-221

Mack Ritchie

1min
pages 196-197

Douglas Ricks

2min
pages 194-195

Robert Pummill

3min
pages 182-187

Leonard H. Reedy

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pages 188-189

Chuck Ren

2min
pages 190-193

John Phelps

2min
pages 178-179

Tom Phillips

2min
pages 180-181

Don Oelze

3min
pages 176-177

Jim C. Norton

3min
pages 168-175

John Moyers

2min
pages 166-167

Gerald McCann

2min
pages 142-143

Mitchell Mansanarez

1min
pages 138-141

David Mann

3min
pages 134-137

Frank McCarthy

2min
pages 144-147

Wendell Macy

1min
pages 132-133

Gerry Metz

1min
pages 148-153

Lanford Monroe

2min
pages 164-165

Kim Mackey

3min
pages 130-131

Dustin Lyon

1min
pages 128-129

Ted Long

2min
pages 124-127

Hayden Lambson

1min
pages 122-123

Morton Künstler

2min
pages 120-121

Harvey Johnson

2min
pages 116-117

Thomas Kinkade

3min
pages 118-119

John Jarvis

1min
pages 114-115

Heinie Hartwig

3min
pages 112-113

Robert Farrington Elwell

2min
pages 94-95

Raul Gutierrez

1min
pages 102-103

Carl Hantman

2min
pages 108-111

David Halbach

1min
pages 104-107

Martin Grelle

1min
pages 100-101

Joe Ferrara

1min
pages 98-99

John Fawcett

2min
pages 96-97

Charlie Dye

2min
pages 92-93

Robert Duncan

2min
pages 84-91

Austin Deuel

2min
pages 78-81

Gene Dodge

2min
pages 82-83

John DeMott

2min
pages 74-77

Stan Davis

1min
pages 70-73

Don Crowley

2min
pages 68-69

Sheila Cottrell

1min
pages 66-67

Jim Carson

3min
pages 44-55

Michael Coleman

1min
pages 56-61

Guy Corriero

2min
pages 64-65

Nicholas Coleman

2min
pages 62-63

Paul Calle

3min
pages 40-43

Don Brackett

2min
pages 34-35

Dan Bodelson

2min
pages 30-33

Reynold Brown

2min
pages 36-39

Paul Abram, Jr

1min
pages 16-19

Roy Andersen

2min
pages 26-29

William Ahrendt

2min
pages 22-25

INTRODUCTION

3min
page 15

Cassilly Adams

2min
pages 20-21
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