Happy Thanksgiving 2008
04 Dec 2008 1 Comment
in Art
First, let me wish everyone a Happy Thanksgiving. Even if where you live, Thanksgiving as a holiday isn’t celebrated, it is always correct to offer thanks for all the good things we have. A lot of turkeys help us celebrate today, and for all of them, it was the last thing they did in their short lives. I guess we could lay the blame for turkey on our Pilgrim forefathers and their friends and families of long ago.

Bitin’ Up

Chuck Wagon
Many of the Pilgrims shared their homesteads and livelihoods with North America’s First People – who we now call Native Americans. Whether it was the Indians who first decided that turkey made for a good dining experience, or the Pilgrims themselves, the tradition continues.

Crow Indian

Francis Setting Eagle
Another traditional event on Thanksgiving is to watch the Detroit Lions and Dallas Cowboys meet their respective opponents on the football field. Yes, football is a form of warfare, and seems contradictory to a day of thanks. But football and Thanksgiving has been a pair throughout my lifetime. While the Lions are normally the first game broadcast, they are most likely the game you will abandon to sit down for your Thanksgiving

Heritage

Mountain Man
A tradition here at Also on Video is to look at Art that can transport us to another time and another place. There’s not a whole lot of Pilgrims that have been captured on canvas, or if there are, I guess I’ve not found any that inspired me to do a column.

Pre-Columbian Indian with Atlatl

Little Star
But today, I am inspired. I’ve brought you a look at the wonderful art of James Bama. This artist was born more than 80 years ago in New York in 1926. I guess art was in his blood as he had a successful 22 year career as a commercial artist. He did cover art for the Saturday Evening Post Magazine, Readers Digest, the New York Football Giants, and the Baseball and Football Hall of Fames. He also did most of the cover art for the Doc Savage paperback books.

Mountain Man and his Fox

Ken Blackbird
But someone must have said to him, “Go west, young man.” And in 1968 he did.

Winter Trapping

Crow Indian Dancer
Bama has been considered by many to be the most ‘realistic‘ illustrator in the wide galaxy of artists. His work is both complex and straightforward. You are not going to say that you don’t understand this art. His powerful compositions, are at once simple for us to understand yet they offer us a living, breathing humanity in his each of his subjects.

Buck Norris at Cross Saber Ranch

Ceremonial Dance
Today, on Thanksgiving, as you give thanks for the food on your tables and the warmth of your families, let us remember the prospectors, trappers, and traders, the settlers, and the homesteaders, the miners, fisherman, farmers, and the men of the forests who trekked across the wilderness of America 100 and 200 years ago.

Ready To Rendezvous

Ready To Ride
Let us also not forget The First People who settled this land before us, and with who we now share this beautiful country.

Cowboy Named Annie

The Chief
Just look at the cowboys and cowgirls, the Indian chiefs, warriors, and elder statesmen, that make up James Bama’s subjects. While we watch our football on HDTV’s, or write columns like this on our computers, artists like James Bama create these magnificent visions by hand.

Pow-wow Dancer

The Pawnee
How fortunate we are to be able to see images like these, and to wonder about the work that created them.

Young Oglala Sioux

Young Plains Indian
Doesn’t today, our national day of thanks, seem like it is ever so fitting, so correct, so supremely proper, and precisely the right time to look back into our history, and to wish for a Happy Thanksgiving Day for everyone.

Doc Savage Novels with Book Cover Art by James Bama


Jim Bama Then and Now
This article was originally published on Thanksgiving Eve which was Wednesday, November 26th, 2008. However it did not transfer over when this, the new location and domain opened on December 3rd, 2008. So we republished it today, December 4th. That is why we have a Happy Thanksgiving article appearing AFTER the holiday has already come and gone. jmm.
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Dec 04, 2008 @ 07:48:20
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One Response to “Happy Thanksgiving 2008”
1. Cesar Says:
November 27th, 2008 at 6:19 pm
That was an amazing post, and it earned you a new RSS subscriber. Keep up the good work!