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More
than any other contemporary military artist, Don Stivers' popularity
has grown on both a national and international scale at an unprecedented
rate.
Don
Stivers has created works of art spanning everything from illustrating
book jackets to the opening of the American West, but most recently
is best known for his prolific production of paintings whose theme
is the American Civil War.
Stivers
chooses, as subjects for his military paintings, events both momentous
for the nation and historically significant for the individuals
involved in each painting: Lee at Gettysburg during the only council
of war he held there; the welcomed return to Washington of the
victorious Union Army after Appomattox; the last horse mounted
cavalry charge made by the 11th U.S. Cavalry. Through the eyes
of the individual we see the fate of nations unfold.
Don Stivers' interest in art began during childhood as he copied
newspaper comics in his hometown of Superior, Wisconsin. His formal
art training began at the California College of Arts and Crafts
after two years as a Navy corpsman in WW II.
He started his professional career as have many of America's
finest artists in the commercial art field, and spent 15
years at it on the West Coast until moving his family to the East.
It was a decision that was to prove monumental in his career.
He immediately began illustrating covers for Readers Digest and
Field & Stream, and the book covers for the James Herriot All
Creatures Great and Small series. He did the portraits of Charles
DeGaulle, John Connally and Admiral Elmo Zumwalt for the covers
of Time magazine. He also began doing portraits of Federal judges
work that he continues to do on occasion.
Following
a natural inclination towards American History as a subject for
fine art, in 1984 he began painting Civil War subjects. With the
help of professional historians and driven by his own desire to
know the most intricate visual details of the subjects he portrays,
he has created some of the most remarkable military art of this
century.
The
U.S. Command & General Staff College, the Army War College, the
2nd, 3rd, 6th, and 11th Armored Cavalry regiments, the 5th Corps
Artillery, the 1st and 4th Infantry Divisions, and the Industrial
College of the Armed Forces have commissioned Stivers' paintings.
His
originals hang in the collections of the U.S. Cavalry Museum,
the Fort Bliss Museum, the Army War College, and the Headquarters
of the 1st Cavalry Division.
His
prints are on display at the Pentagon, and in literally thousands
of private collections across the country and overseas. The demand
for his prints is so great, they often sell out within a few days
of release.
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