Press

Coronato was keen to chronicle the cowboy culture accurately and took a job ranching as a result. Coronato's the unofficial Leonardo da Vinci of ranching life and an astute observer of the culture..

Mark Ellwood, New York post

Black Hills Pioneer -- Selected by the Smithsonian July 8 2017

Black Hills Pioneer -- Selected by the Smithsonian July 8 2017

EXTREMELY well written  full feature article ,…..Full Article     Click Here


Bob Coronato Photographed for library of Congress by "Americas Photographer" Carol Highsmith 08-22-2015

Bob Coronato Photographed for library of Congress by “Americas Photographer” Carol Highsmith 08-22-2015

Library of Congress Archive Information:

Bob Coronato by Portrait of Russell Means call number LC-DIG-highsm- 34163
Bob Coronato in his Studio Call Number: LC-DIG-highsm- 34015

Bob Coronato by Portrait of Russell Means call number LC-DIG-highsm- 34163
Bob Coronato in his Studio Call Number: LC-DIG-highsm- 34015

Carol Highsmith know as “Americas Photographer” as scene on television quick books commercial, comes to Hulett Wyoming Studio of Bob Coronato to take Photographs and Document the studio for the U.S. Library of Congress. 08-22-2015


Call Number: LC-DIG-highsm- 34200 Photograph Title : The complex Rogues Gallery antique store in Hulett, Wyoming

Carol Highsmith “Americas Photographer” Shot photographs Documenting each of the 50 states for the U.S. Library of Congress. On her trip through Wyoming she photographed the studio in Hulett Wyoming


Rodeo News Feature 2017 -- Art of Rodeo

Read Full Article   Click Here


Western Art Collector Magazine Aug 2017 -- Bound for Washington

Bob Coronato kicked out of the Masters of the American West Show - Gene Autry Center by John Geraghty for the painting of Russell Means

” I actually got kicked out of the Masters of the American West show at the Gene Autry for this painting.  The Masters Show special advisor at the time, (John Geraghty)  called me and wanted to dictate what I painted and I told him: ” John that’s not what I do, I document things  that I’ve been apart of or seen personally ”
I showed up for the next  Masters show with a 7  foot tall portrait of Russell Means. The painting hung at the show and was the talk of the show. Both Mian Situ and Howard  Terpning told me they were very impressed.
A few weeks later I got another phone call from the special advisor (John)  ” Bob, although I cannot find fault with your brushwork, I find fault with your subject matter ”

Personally, I loved this painting, I spent 6-7 months never leaving a chair to finish it, painting around the clock until the sun came up the next day.  I sat so long, not moving, I actually hurt myself, hardly being able to walk afterwords. So when I got that call  from Geraghty, I did not really care because I felt this was the pinnacle of my life’s work, I finally created a painting with meaning. A few years later when the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery purchased it, I felt like I had maybe in a little way, counted coup on John.”

Bob Coronato


Premier Issue of Rodeo Round Up Dec - 2017

Rodeo Round Up is the Largest Rodeo Publication in the Nation, serving as the official magazine for 46 rodeo associations.

This is the first issue of Rodeo Round Up  as its own publication !

1000’s were handed out during the NFR in Las Vegas 2017

 


Bob Coronato in new Jared Leto Film "Great Wide Open" Episode 5
Artist Bob Coronato in front of Rogues Gallery Hulett Wyoming
Our Good Friend and Climing Legend Frank Sanders ,...makes the cut big time!
Frank Sanders of Devils Tower Lodge

Bob Coronato in new Jared Leto Film "Great Wide Open" Episode 5

Jared Leto’s new series on National Parks and Climing called Great Wide Open can be seen on you tube.
episode 5 features Independence Day and Devils tower also known as Bear Lodge.
Artist Bob Coronato of Hulett Wyoming was briefly interviewed on “The American Dream”
Although briefly appearing in the footage Bob Coronato states “I think I’m living the American Dream,….I started out pretty poor, wanted to be an artist, wanted to paint the West,…and,… I’m living it now!”

The Episode features beautiful images of Devils Tower and the surrounding area, as well as various interviews with climbers, and individuals who like the inspiration from wide open places.
Some footage was shot on the front porch of Rogues Gallery Studio of Bob Coronato in Hulett Wyoming.

Frank Sanders a friend of Bob as well as insightful character of legend makes several appearances. Frank Sanders climes Devils Tower / “Bear Lodge” and Guides climes every day. He has the record for the most climes of the “Tower” and loves to send visitors of his bed and breakfast down to Hulett to visit the Rogues Gallery and museum of American Indian Items. The Devils Tower Frontier Museum is also Rogues Gallery and the studio of Bob Coronato. The Museum features hundreds of old west frontier items from the local region. Items include old west Cowboy, American Indian as well as art, photographs and historic items from the early western frontier.
The museum has Historic items like a carbine from Battle of little Big Horn, lots of items from the 1874 Custer expedition into the Black Hills, plus numerous beaded American Indian items from the 19th century.


Cover and Feature in Wyoming Livestock Round Up 2016 - 2017

PBS - Painting and Travel with Roger and Sara Bansemer Visit Studio of Bob Coronato 2015 - 2016

Two PBS Television Specials 2015
Painting and Travel with Roger and Sara Bansemer Etching Studio tour of Bob Coronato
Painting and Travel with Roger and Sara Bansemer Tour of Devils Tower Frontier Museum “Rogues Gallery” with Bob Coronato

The Two Programs will Air on PBS Throughout the United States:
If you have not seen Roger and Saras Painting and Travel show I highly recommend it!! Fun, interesting and always educational.
Roger a great painter,and is one of the most prolific artists I have had the pleasure to meet.


Article in Journal of the Print World "Born on the Fourth of July" ( About the Cody Wyoming Rodeo Poster )

Cover of and Article in "Ranch & Reata" magazine Vol. 5.2 June/July 2015


Wyoming 4th Grade Art Critic

Thanks again for allowing me to show and talk about your work with so many students and educators around Wyoming! This project was one of the highlights of my career, and using your piece and seeing students’ responses made it extra special. There is something magical about your Cody Stampede poster that really excited the students. I was impressed that students really understood the quality of the work, but that they also really understood the humor. As you’ll see, many commented on this. You are an outstanding artist and an asset to our state. Have a wonderful summer!
-Allen


POSTER COMMEMORATES BUCKING HORSE SALE

BY Josh Samuelson
Miles City Star Staff Writer

Fans of the World Famous Bucking Horse Sale who are looking for a souvenir other than memmories, cell phone photos – or , if you’re a  contestant, a few bumps and bruises – will be able to take home a beautifully crafted poster by renowned western artist Bob Coronato. The poster , which measures 18″ wide by 38 ” tall, is on sale for $20.  and is available at the Miles City Area Chamber of Commerce or online at www.buckinghorsesale.com or www.milescitychamber.com.
Coronato, from Hulett Wyo., was at the Bucking Horse Sale last year, taking in the festivities, when he ran into Chamber Executive Director and BHS  Board of Governors member John Laney. Coronato mentioned that he would like to do a commemorative poster for the Bucking Horse Sale, and after a quick Internet search, Laney and the chamber quickly agreed.

“It was probably the easiest committee i’ve ever worked with” Coronato said. “Usually they’re hesitant and shy about what your going to do. but they were great.” Coronato has done numerous posters for rodeos around the region, including Belle Fourche, S.D., Deadwood, S.D., and Sheridan, Wyo., among others. Due to the time that goes into each poster, he does just one a year.
“I want to get to all the major rodeos in the region,” Coronato said. “Ive been asked to do ones around the country, but I turned them down because I want to stay in this area.”

The process of putting togeather the impressive work of art starts with some studying.
“I came to the Bucking Horse last year and hung out for a few days and got the flavor of it all,” Coronato said. After getting the go-ahead from Miles City, Coronato went to work on the itricate painting. The painting took nearly four months, working seven days a week from 10 in the morning until as late as five the next morning. ” I’m not real fast,” Coronato said. “It’s a painting, and a painting in layers. It starts with a flat board, and then texture it down with modeling paste. I paint an acrylic on that and then go over it with a silk screen to get the lettering just right, and then over that with oil paint. And all of those steps take drying times and some manipulations.”

The original painting that was used to create the poster stands at 59 inches tall. “This is one of my favorites,” Coronato said. ” The whole event is one of my favorites. It’s a lifestyle, it’s iconic in a way.  You’re not a real bronc rider until you’ve done Miles City.”

Laney and the chamber have been thrilled with the results of Coronato’s labor. “It’s a beautiful piece of art,” Laney said. “It’s nice to be in the mix with the rodeos that he’s doing. He wants to do the big rodeos in the region, and it’s cool that we got ours before Cheyenne Frontier Days got theirs.”

BOB CORONATO immersed himself in the Bucking Horse Sale, then spent hours capturing its spirit in this poster.

841

Coronato grew up in New Jersey, but his heart was in the Old West. And after graduating from art school in Los Angeles, he moved to Hulett, Wyo., (pop. 383)
Coronato has lived in Hulett about 20 years now, but when he first moved their he quickly joined in the ranch lifestyle that would be the focus of his art. “Once I went to Hulett, I wanted to get fully embeded,” Coronato said. ” So i went to work on ranches, branding and trailing. I was free labor for everyone in southeastern Montana, Wyoming and South Dakota. I started out painting traditional ranching scenes, but i always wanted to do rodeo posters. I waited until it was just right. I waited to get into posters until i had enough expirience, lived long enough in the area to have it just right”

That dedication is evident in his poster for the Bucking Horse Sale. The work features scenes from throught the weekend, highlighted by a rider hanging on to a bucking horse. Ther’s also a scene from the street dance, and the wild horse racer being dragged through the dirt.

The BHS Board  of Governors released a photo of the poster on facebook a few months ago, and there was immediate and overwhelming demand for the art. “it went wild,” Coronato said. ” People were calling constantly, and it wasn’t even done yet. We saw it was on pinterest: it was everywhere.”

The most interesting scene on the poster is at the bottom,  featuring an old cowboy riding a young girl’s bike, a true story from Hulett. ” There was a guy in Hulett who hadn’t  missed a Bucking Horse Sale in something like 30 years” Coronato said. ” And for whatever reasons, he didn’t have  a drivers license. But he was going to get to the Bucking horse Sale, so he got on a bike and started pedaling to Miles City. He got about halfway to Alzada Mt. (30 miles from Hulett) and got picked up. He never missed a Bucking Horse Sale, and its kind of a legend in Hulett, so i had to get it on there.”

Coronato will not be signing posters at the sale, choosing to enjoy the weekend in realative anonymity.  But he did sign the posters that are at the chamber.


Bob Coronato Etching Demonstration at Santa Barbara Historical Museum