Ronald Himler
Bigfork · Tucson · Whitefish
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Piegan Winter
Ronald Himler
$ 4,950 -
Siksika
Ronald Himler
$ 8,250 -
Mescaleros
Ronald Himler
$ 9,800 -
Caution
Ronald Himler
$ 5,400 -
Caution
Ronald Himler
$ 1,750 -
Absaroke
Ronald Himler
$ 1,900 -
Crossing the Desert
Ronald Himler
$ 2,800 -
Mountain Crow
Ronald Himler
$ 1,450 -
Shepherdess
Ronald Himler
$ 1,450 -
Brule Warrior
Ronald Himler
$ 5,400 -
Northern Cheyenne
Ronald Himler
$ 4,500 -
Caution II
Ronald Himler
$ 3,250 -
Mescalero Apache
Ronald Himler
$ 2,800 -
Man of the Plains
Ronald Himler
$ 4,500 -
Outrider
Ronald Himler
$ 4,500 -
Shoshone
Ronald Himler
$ 3,600 -
Autumn Aspens
Ronald Himler
$ 1,200 -
In the Shadows of Wolves
Ronald Himler
$ 8,000 -
Blackfoot Country
Ronald Himler
$ 6,000 -
Chance Encounter
Ronald Himler
$ 7,000 -
A Question of Intentions
Ronald Himler
$ 6,000 -
Trials of a Beaverman
Ronald Himler
$ 10,000 -
Santee Sioux
Ronald Himler
$ 1,100 -
Trouble in the Wind
Ronald Himler
$ 2,800 -
Desert Winds
Ronald Himler
$ 4,950 -
The Eagle’s Nest
Ronald Himler
$ 3,250 -
Shoshone
Ronald Himler
$ 1,100 -
Man of the Plains
Ronald Himler
$ 1,100 -
Outrider
Ronald Himler
$ 1,100 -
Early Snow
Ronald Himler
$ 800 -
Gray Wolf
Ronald Himler
$ 800

Ronald Himler
TUCSON, AZ
While traveling in the American Southwest, Ronald was permitted to attend Indian ceremonial dances. The dances opened for him a door to a people and a time with which he felt an inexplicable empathy. As a result of these impressions he began a series of oil paintings expressing aspects of Native American culture, especially those of Plains Indians. His work has been featured in magazines and on television, and his paintings are in private collections throughout the United States and Europe, as well as in the permanent collection at Vermont’s Bennington Museum.
Himler has also illustrated more than one hundred books for children, including The Lily Cupboard by Shulamith Levey Oppenheim, Hook Moon Night by Faye Gibbons, and The Wall and Fly Away Home, both by Eve Bunting. His work also appears in art galleries throughout the Southwest, where he is highly acclaimed for his portrayal of the Plains Indians. Mr. Himler lives in the desert just outside Tucson, Arizona.