A Helping Hand 1996
Terry Redlin
Limited Edition Print : Lithograph
Size : 18.5x21 in | 47x53 cm
Framed : 23x36 in | 58x91 cm
Edition : From the Edition of 9500
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🔥1996 Framed Limited Edition Lithograph - Inquire $$$$$$$
Year1996
Hand SignedLower Right in Pencil
Condition Excellent
Framed with GlassBlack and Wood Frame w/ Blue Mat
Purchased fromDealer 1998
Certificate of AuthenticityRedlin Wildlife Art, Inc.
LID161701
Terry Redlin - United States
Art Brokerage: Terry Redlin American Wildlife Artist: b. 1937-2016. Terry Avon Redlin was an American artist popular for painting outdoor themes and wildlife, often pictured in twilight. During the 1990s he was frequently named "America's most popular artist" in annual gallery surveys conducted by U.S. Art magazine. Redlin was born and raised in Watertown, South Dakota. He originally planned to become a forest ranger, but at 15 was disabled in a motorcycle accident. In 1967 Redlin and his family moved to Forest Lake, Minnesota. He earned a degree from the St. Paul School of Associated Arts in St. Paul, Minnesota, and spent 25 years working in commercial art as a layout artist, graphic designer, illustrator and art director. Redlin's painting Winter Snows appeared on the cover of The Farmer magazine in 1977. Two years later, he became a full-time artist. He retired in 2007 after being diagnosed with dementia that proved to be caused by Alzheimer's disease. In addition to individual works, Redlin produced series of paintings on the first stanza of "America the Beautiful" (1992) and on the life of an American boy, based on his own life (An American Portrait, 2004). In 1992 the magazine inducted him into its hall of fame. He won the Minnesota Duck Stamp contest twice and the state trout stamp contest once, and in 1982 came second in the Federal Duck Stamp contest. Listings wanted.