Charles Marion Russell lived the life he painted. He arrived in Montana at
age 16 in 1880, worked as a cowboy, sheepherder, and wrangler, and immersed
himself in the open-range ranching culture, Native American life, and rugged
landscapes of the northern plains. Self-taught and deeply authentic, Russell
produced over 4,000 works, including:
In Without Knocking by Charles M. Russell (1909). Cowboys on horseback burst through the doors
of a saloon, guns blazing and cards flying, in chaotic celebration or
confrontation. Housed at the Amon Carter Museum.
One of Russell’s most famous
“cowboy” paintings, it captures the rowdy, untamed spirit of frontier towns.
Its dynamic composition and humor made it a cultural icon of Western saloons
and revelry.



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