
Bow Man
bronze, edition of 10
28"h x 21"l x 9"d
$10,500

Bow Man
bronze, edition of 10
28"h x 21"l x 9"d
$10,500

Unknown Study
bronze, edition of 100
18 1/2"h x 15"l x 13"d
$4,500

Hidatsa
bronze, edition of 30
35"h x 10"l x 9"d
$9,500

Toussant Charboneaux Family
bronze, edition of 30
33 3/4"h x 15"l x 13"d
$21,000
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Wyoming Book Ends
bronze, edition of 100
11"h x 5 1/2"l x 3"d
$1,800 per pair

Eagle Chief
bronze, edition of 10
24"h x 26"l x 20"d
$9,500

About Richard V. Greeves
Richard Greeves' destiny as an artist was shaped by a trip he took to the Wind River Reservation when he was fifteen. Spending time with a Native American family left an indelible impression on Greeves. He returned to his home in St. Louis, Missouri, but years later went back to Fort Washakie to live among the North American Plains Indians.
He portrays, through sculpture, the character and spiritual essence of the people and animals of his chosen homeland. Greeves was the winner of the James Earle Fraser Award for Outstanding Artistic Merit at the National Cowboy & Western Heritage Museum in 2000.
His monuments to Chief Washakie and Crazy Horse reside in the gardens of the Buffalo Bill Center of the West in Cody, Wyoming.