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William Herbert
Dunton, known later in life as “Buck,” was
born in Augusta, Maine, in 1878. His lifelong passion for the outdoors
was nurtured from an early age by his grandfather, who took him
on expeditions, teaching him about hunting and fishing. Drawing
the outdoors followed naturally. As a child, Dunton was self-taught,
developing a precise style that would lead to a successful career
as an illustrator. He first sold drawings to a magazine at age
16, when he quit school to work as a professional illustrator.
William Herbert Dunton’s precocious talent was further educated with classes
at the Cowles Art School in Boston, and at the Art Student’s
League in New York City. The magazines that Dunton worked for included
Harper’s Weekly, Collier’s, Woman’s Home Companion,
Scribners, Cosmopolitan, and several others. He also illustrated
numerous books, including several of the classic cowboy stories
of Zane Grey. It was the search for subject material for illustrations
of western life that first brought Dunton out West, to Montana,
in 1896. For the next 15 years, he spent every summer traveling
the western states, doing sketches that would become the basis
for his magazine illustrations. It was during this period that
Dunton began to grow weary, and eventually fed up with the pressures
of deadlines, and the demands of editors.

William Herbert Dunton, A Lazy Day in Camp, Circa 1916, Oil on Canvas Board, 8" x 10"
In 1912, William Herbert
Dunton was
enrolled at the Art Student’s League
for a class with Ernest Blumenschein, the well-known western painter
who had been instrumental in establishing the artist colony at
Taos, New Mexico. It was not long before Blumenschein suggested
that Dunton would be happier living out west, in Taos. William Herbert
Dunton complied
that very summer, intent on leaving the pressures of New York behind
in order to focus seriously on his painting. He would remain in
Taos for the rest of his life.
Settling in Taos, William Herbert
Dunton pursued his favorite subject matter with
free rein: The open range, hunters, cowboys on horseback, and scenes
representing native life before the influx of Europeans. He seemed
particularly concerned with recording the ways and appearances
of the Old West, a lifestyle that he felt was significant but fading
before his very eyes.
“The West has passed – more’s the pity. In another
25 years the old-time westerner will have gone too – gone
with the buffalo and the antelope. I’m going to hand down
to posterity a bit of the unadulterated real thing…”
And hand down the real thing he did. William Herbert
Dunton exerted his skills
for rendering detail to achieve exact authenticity in clothing,
equipment, and the powerful muscles of horses. The precision of
his painting, along with the hint of drama, were the hallmarks
of his work. In addition to painting, Dunton also did precise lithographs
of animals, a technique he had acquired in New York when the Depression
made it necessary to produce less expensive art work.

William Herbert Dunton, The End of the Day, Circa 1915, Oil on Canvas Board, 12" x 16"
For some time, William Herbert
Dunton
continued to do illustrations for magazines while living in New
Mexico, in order to make enough money to live.
There were no galleries in Taos at that time, so in order to sell
their paintings, the artists Blumenschein, Sharp, Couse, Phillips,
and Berninghaus, along with Dunton, arranged traveling exhibitions
to promote their work – the official beginning of the Taos
Society of Artists.
William Herbert Dunton remained in Taos
as the Society grew. One notable friend of his was the Russian
painter Gaspard, who was not warmly welcomed
by most others there. Dunton, however, sought painting instruction
from Gaspard, and in turn advised the Russian on the best places
for hiking and fishing, as they shared an intense love of outdoor
activities. Their collaboration is interesting, because their painting
styles were so radically different. The fact that Dunton sought
instruction from Gaspard suggests that he was looking to branch
out and develop his painting style further. However, his style
remained little changed, and he succeeded in attracting several
prominent collectors including Douglas Fairbanks, Franklin Roosevelt,
and H.J. Lutcher Stark. The Stark Museum in Orange, Texas still
houses the largest collection of Dunton’s work in the U.S.
In 1922 William Herbert
Dunton resigned from the Taos Society of Artists, likely
due to a personal conflict, and from then on arranged solo exhibitions
of his work. For the next 13 years he exhibited in several states,
from New Mexico to New York. In 1923 he was commissioned to do
a three paneled mural for the Missouri State Capitol.
William Herbert Dunton’s
health began its long decline in 1928, when he was injured by a
horse,
and began suffering from ulcers. He continued
to deteriorate, and was finally diagnosed with prostate cancer
in 1935. Buck Dunton died in Taos in 1936, at the age of 57.
Bibliography
1. Bickerstaff, Laura, Pioneer
Artists of Taos, Sage Books, Denver,
1955, p. 55-68.
2. Coke, Van Daren, Taos and Santa Fe, The Artist’s Environment
1882-1942, University of New Mexico Press, 1963, pp. 22-23.
3. Luhan, Mabel Dodge, Taos and Its Artists, Duell Sloan and Pearce,
New York, 1947.
4. Schimmel, Julie, W. Herbert Dunton – The Man and His Art,
Sports Afield, Feb. 1988, pp. 94-99.
5. Exhibition Catalog, William Herbert “Buck” Dunton,
June 2001 – May 2002, Stark Museum, Orange, TX.
6. Dunton Family Organization, W. Herbert Dunton – His Life
and Artwork.
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