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Jack Swanson, Director

Jack Swanson
Carmel Valley, California.

Jack Swanson is an original founding member of Stewards of the Range and a long time friend of the Wayne and Jean Hage family. The organization was officially formed in 1992 when he unveiled the original oil he painted for the cause titled Stewards of the Range in Carmel California.

Swanson is an internationally renowned western artist who is often referred to as the modern day Charlie Russell because of his unerring realism that comes from a lifetime affinity for cowboys and horses dating back to the 1940s when he worked in the Tehachapi’s with the last of the great vaqueros. Jack and his wife Sally reside on the same ranch they built 40+ years ago and it is probably the only studio with an indoor stall allowing him to paint horses from life. He is also a past vice president of the Cowboy Artists of America, once teaching a CAA workshop called, “Anatomy of the Horse in Action.”

From the vast rangelands of Nevada and eastern Oregon to the pastoral oak-covered hills of California, the images in Jack Swanson’s work capture the old west. In the early 1940s, he worked in the Tehachapi’s with the last of the great vaqueros. After World War II, he broke and sold wild horses in Oregon, working with the top buckaroos in the northwest cow country. Swanson’s landscapes are real because he’s been there. He paints from personal observation, with a sensitive eye that can catch and hold all the movements of horse and rider.

Swanson’s bronze sculptures and oil paintings have appeared in many top Western magazines, including Western Horseman, for which he created ten covers. In 1980, he was featured in an article in Time magazine. In 2002, Swanson was named Westerner of the Year at the Western Ranchers Beef Cooperative’s sixth annual profit conference, where he was honored as a defender of property rights and ranching. “Ranchers are environmentalists,” he says. “Their livelihood depends on their good care of the range. Their families are the type of honest and hardworking people that built America. Their roots are in the land, many for generations, and their land keeps improving under their care.”

Swanson’s work is collected by all types of people, from broken-down cowboys to famous celebrities. President Ronald Reagan hung one of Swanson’s oils in the Oval Room of the White House. His work also hangs in the National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum, the C. M. Russell Museum, and the National Center for American Western Art.

Because of his contribution to the property rights movement, prints of his famous oil Stewards of the Range will forever hang prominently in ranch houses across the west.

Educating .

We educate Americans on issues affecting property rights and individual liberties through our publications, Coordination Works, Liberty Matters and American Stewards Digest.

Fighting .

Locally: We send experts directly into communities to help local leaders protect their way of life through our Local Outreach Program.

Nationally: We gather together our members to fight in the halls of Congress through our Liberty Matters alerts and, when necessary, file legal actions in the courts to protect property rights.

Training .

We train local governments how to assert their coordinate role in the federal and state planning process through our CALL America conference program.

Winning .

We are winning battles in communities nationwide and one-by-one we are restoring our nation from the ground up.
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