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Howard Klau Forsberg Sold at Auction Prices

b. 1918 - d. 2002

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        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Aug. 20, 2023

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $475 - $600

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          May. 14, 2023

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $500 - $625

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Feb. 12, 2023

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $550 - $700

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Nov. 13, 2022

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $550 - $700

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Aug. 21, 2022

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $575 - $750

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          May. 08, 2022

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $625 - $750

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Feb. 06, 2022

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $650 - $850

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Nov. 14, 2021

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $700 - $850

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Aug. 07, 2021

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $700 - $900

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          May. 09, 2021

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $750 - $950

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Feb. 07, 2021

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $700 - $800

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Feb. 07, 2021

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $700 - $800

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Dull Knife, Cheyenne YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on canvas board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115133 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Nov. 08, 2020

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $750 - $850

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Nov. 08, 2020

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $750 - $850

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Dull Knife, Cheyenne YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on canvas board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115133 US Shipping $60 + insurance. AD: ART CONSIGNMENTS WANTED. CONTACT US Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Aug. 09, 2020

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $800 - $900

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Aug. 09, 2020

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $800 - $900

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Dull Knife, Cheyenne YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on canvas board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115133 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          May. 03, 2020

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $850 - $950

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          May. 03, 2020

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $850 - $950

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Dull Knife, Cheyenne YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on canvas board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115133 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Mar. 01, 2020

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $850 - $950

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Mar. 01, 2020

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $850 - $950

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Dull Knife, Cheyenne YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on canvas board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115133 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Dec. 08, 2019

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $900 - $1,000

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Dec. 08, 2019

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $900 - $1,000

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Dull Knife, Cheyenne YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on canvas board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115133 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Aug. 18, 2019

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $1,000 - $1,150

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Gall, Sioux YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115141 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting
          Aug. 18, 2019

          Howard Forsberg (NM,CT,WI,1918-2002) oil painting

          Est: $1,000 - $1,150

          ARTIST: Howard Klau Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) NAME: Chief Dull Knife, Cheyenne YEAR: 1975 MEDIUM: oil on canvas board CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 20 x 16 inches / 50 x 40 cm FRAME SIZE: 22 x 18 inches / 55 x 45 cm SIGNATURE: Lower right SIMILAR ARTISTS: James Reynolds, John Moyers, Howard Terpning, Bob Kuhn, Charles Marion Russell, Frank Tenney Johnson, R S Riddick, Frank C McCarthy, Olaf Carl Wieghorst, Jason Rich, Eanger Irving Couse, Jim Norton, Kenneth Pauling Riley, Joe Beeler, Bill Anton CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115133 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $60 + insurance. Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, Connecticut, Wisconsin, 1918 - 2002) Howard Klau Forsberg of Rio Rancho, New Mexico, a book and magazine illustrator who also taught at the Famous Artists School in Connecticut and painted Western art in Arizona, California and New Mexico, died on November 22, 2002 at the age of 84, after a brief illness. Forsberg had done illustrations for Walt Disney, Hanna-Barbera, Life Magazine, Reader's Digest, Ladies' Home Journal and Collier's Magazine in a career that spanned 65 years. His work included magazine covers and story illustrations as well as ads and billboards for such commercial clients as Pepsi-Cola, Budweiser, Ford Motor Co. and Mattel Toys. Among the books he illustrated for Disney were, The Magic of Mary Poppins and Walt Disney Introduces: Winnie the Pooh. Forsberg also was the author and illustrator of his own book, An Approach to Figure Painting for the Beginner. Howard Klau Forsberg was born in 1918 in Milwaukee, the son and grandson of artists. He embarked on his own career at 16, studying at the Layton School of Art in Milwaukee and at the Frederic Mizen School in Chicago. He served as an apprentice at the Roger Grauman Studio in Chicago and moved up to illustrator at Stephens, Hall and Biondi, another Chicago studio with contracts in advertising and publishing. Mr. Forsberg was a featured artist for the cover of Coronet Magazine (owned by Esquire) for the period of 1947 through 1951, appearing on the cover at least 12 times. Coronet Magazine , which ceased operations in the mid 1960's, had a circulation of over 2.5 million at the time Mr. Forsberg was featured. Cornonet featured "real life " scenes on their magazine and was prelude to the very successful run of Norman Rockwell's American Scenes that appeared on the cover of the Saturday Evening Post in the 1960's and later. He was an instructor for 11 years at the Famous Artists School in Westport, Connecticut, before moving to New Mexico in 1977 and devoting his final 25 years to painting the West. His work was shown in galleries in Santa Fe, Taos, Albuquerque and Cimarron, New Mexico; Dallas; New Orleans; Jackson Hole, Wyoming; and in Sedona and Tucson, Arizona. He lived in Tucson briefly during the late 1940s. He also traveled in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and British Columbia as his work turned westward in the 1940s and 1950s. He moved his family to Pasadena, California in 1952 and headed a commercial art agency in Los Angeles until the mid-1960s, when he joined the faculty at Famous Artists.

          Broward Auction Gallery LLC
        • HOWARD FORSBERG(1918-2002)CHEYENNE INDIAN PAINTING
          Aug. 27, 2017

          HOWARD FORSBERG(1918-2002)CHEYENNE INDIAN PAINTING

          Est: $300 - $500

          Framed oil painting on board, Chief Dull Knife, Cheyenne", signed, dated, lower right 1975, Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, 1918-2002), sight: 19.5"h, 15.5"w, overall: 28.5"h, 24.5"w, 6lbs Start Price: $200.00

          Austin Auction Gallery
        • HOWARD FORSBERG(1918-2002)CHEYENNE INDIAN PAINTING
          Aug. 27, 2017

          HOWARD FORSBERG(1918-2002)CHEYENNE INDIAN PAINTING

          Est: $300 - $500

          Framed oil painting on board, Chief Gall, Sioux,, signed, dated, lower right 1975, Howard Forsberg (New Mexico, 1918-2002), sight: 19.5"h, 15.5"w, overall: 28.5"h, 24.5"w, 6.5lbs Start Price: $200.00

          Austin Auction Gallery
        • Howard Forsberg (American, 1918-2002)
          Sep. 11, 2009

          Howard Forsberg (American, 1918-2002)

          Est: $1,000 - $1,500

          The Late Callers oil on canvas signed and dated 1977 17.5" x 23.5"

          Cowan's Auctions
        • AN OIL ON CANVAS;possibly an illustration, depicting an orna
          Jun. 09, 2005

          AN OIL ON CANVAS;possibly an illustration, depicting an orna

          Est: -

          AN OIL ON CANVAS;possibly an illustration, depicting an ornately-dressed ruler, signed l.r. Howard Forsberg (American, 1918 - 2002, best known as an illustrator). Together with an oil on canvas of a Napoleonic figure, signed l.r. Montagu 1970. 2 pieces. The first 24" x 2'

          Nye & Company
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