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Doolittle Bev

Bev Doolittle "Doubleback" signed and numbered print
By Bev Doolittle
Located in Cincinnati, OH
Bev Doolittle "Doubleback" signed and numbered print 5531/15000 Camouflage bear hidden in image
Category

Early 2000s American Prints

Materials

Wood, Paper

The Art of Bev Doolittle
Located in Bradenton, FL
The Art of Bev Doolittle, text and poems by Elise Maclay. Hardcover book with dustjacket, published
Category

Late 20th Century Italian Books

Materials

Paper

The Art of Bev Doolittle
The Art of Bev Doolittle
H 12.25 in W 9.5 in D 1 in

Recent Sales

Limited Edition Signed Lithograph by Bev Doolittle, "Pintos"
By Bev Doolittle
Located in Toledo, OH
A beautiful signed limited edition lithograph by Bev Doolittle, "Pintos", 1978, Edition is 1000
Category

Late 20th Century American Prints

Sacred Circle Book
By Bev Doolittle
Located in Austin, TX
fascinating story of nature, of Native Americans' belief in sacred circles, and of Bev Doolittle's adventures
Category

1990s Animal Prints

Materials

Other Medium

Where the Silence Speaks (chap-book)
By Bev Doolittle
Located in Austin, TX
publishing the collected works of Bev Doolittle in an exciting and dynamic book entitled Where Silence Speaks
Category

1990s American Realist Animal Prints

Materials

Other Medium

Bev Doolittle "Woodland Encounter"
By Bev Doolittle
Located in Cathedral City, CA
Signed Limited Edition Lithograph, framed. Image size: 32 x 16 Edition: 1500 Edition Number: 1036/1500
Category

Vintage 1970s American Modern Prints

Materials

Paper, Wood

"Eagle Heart" Serigraph 19 x 19 1/2 Signed and Numbered, hidden eagles
By Bev Doolittle
Located in Dallas, TX
Signed in Pencil Edition of 17550 /48000 Doolittle attended college at the Art Center College of
Category

Late 20th Century Naturalistic Prints and Multiples

Materials

Screen

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Bev Doolittle for sale on 1stDibs

Biography from the Archives of askART From California, Bev Doolittle is a painter of western wilderness subjects whose subjects come from traveling the western United States and living outdoors for first-hand observation. She is noted for her careful attention to realistic detail of her western subjects including cowboys, Indians, horses, and natural landscape. She has also built a career by having great success with the print market beginning in 1979 when Greenwich Workshop did a limited edition of 1000 prints of her horse painting, Pintos, which had won the 1979 American Watercolor Society competition in New York. She was born to a large family in Southern California and showed an early aptitude for painting and drawing. She studied at the Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles, having earned a scholarship there while still in high school. Two years after graduation from the Art Center, she married a fellow student, Jay Doolittle. Their honeymoon was a painting trip to Bryce and Zion National Parks. Then, for the first five years of their marriage, they were focused on creating images for advertising and television, endeavors that paid reasonably well when combined with traveling to art fairs to sell their work, but which were not aesthetically satisfying nor financially stabilizing. Working on a series called "You and Me" paintings, they found moderate success with works that had Jay's semi-abstract background and Bev's detailed figures and animals. In 1973, they 'dropped out, leaving the advertising agency and moved to a rural area, and from there spent a year in backpack travel in the United States, Canada, and East Africa. Beginning with transportation in an old pickup truck, they went to National Parks including the Grand Canyon, Yosemite, and Sequoia. With paintings to exhibit and fresh air in their 'veins', the couple explored marketing options, which included outdoor fairs and established art festivals. This approach now proved successful, and they increasingly drew on subject matter from their year-long trip. By the end of the 1970s, she had strong gallery representation. In 1981, the couple had a son, Jason, and several years later, Jay Doolittle took over the business side of her artwork as well as much of the daily care of Jason. Her prints continued to be successful, with a 1989 work titled selling 69,000, a record that for a long time was unmatched in the world of print distribution. A 1993 project called 'Painting in Sound" by the Greenwich Workshop won a grammy award and, setting her paintings to authentic bird and animal sounds, raised over $200,000 for wildlife organizations. Doolittle has also written and illustrated many books including Music in the Wind, The Spirit Takes Flight, and The Forest Has Eyes. Of her painting and writing, she says: I try to look beyond the obvious and create unique, meaningful paintings that depict our WEstern wilderness and its inhabitants." (Geocities) Sources include: http://www.geocities.com/moondarlin/artdoolittle3.html http://www.galleryone.com/doolittle_biography.htm