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Sam Savitt

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Sam Savitt
BornMarch 22, 1917
DiedDecember 25, 2000
Alma materPratt Institute
Occupation(s)Artist and author
SpouseBette
ChildrenVicki, Roger

Sam Savitt (March 22, 1917 – December 25, 2000) was an equine artist, author, and teacher, as well as an illustrator of over 130 books, in addition to his own. He was designated the official illustrator of the United States Equestrian Team, and was a founding member of the American Academy of Equine Art.[1] He created several horse charts that are considered authoritative works and have been used by the Smithsonian Institution.[1]

Early life

Sam Savitt was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania in 1917. He graduated from Pratt Institute in 1939, and was a veteran of the Second World War, where he held the rank of First Lieutenant. He was further educated at the New School, in sculpting, as well as the Art Students League of New York in visual arts.[2] Savitt was also an active equestrian, and relocated to North Salem, New York in 1956.[3]

Career

The New York Times said of his 1956 book Step-a-Bit: The Story of a Foal, that Savitt's drawings had "great charm and spontaneity".[2][4] That year Savitt was named the official artist of the United States Equestrian Team. Then his book Midnight, Champion Bucking Horse won the Boys Club of America junior book award in 1958.[2] In 1950, he illustrated the seminal book on English equestrianism, Learning to Ride, Hunt, and Show by Gordon Wright.[3]

His paintings have been used in the posters for races like the Kentucky Derby and the National Horse Show. His work went to galleries and commercial accounts, and he painted portraits of people such as William Randolph Hearst Jr. and Raymond Firestone.[2] It was at times considered a mark of greatness for a race horse to have been illustrated and published by Savitt.[5] He has also created paintings of horses participating in competitive polo. In addition, his subjects included fox hunting, rodeo, steeple-chasing and show jumping.[6] His 1981 book Draw Horses with Sam Savitt is considered to be a seminal book in equine portraiture.[7] As a writer he wrote sixteen books and co-authored two. In addition, he illustrated more than 130 books by other authors.[2] He worked as a cover artist for Dell Books. His comic book work included stories written about Gene Autry, Roy Rogers, The Lone Ranger, The Cisco Kid, and Ben-Hur. His work appeared in magazines that included Equus, The Chronicle of the Horse, Equine Images, Arizona Highways, Boys’ Life, and Sports Illustrated.[7]

In 1998 Savitt was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the North American Horseman’s Association. The association had previously awarded him the title of Equine Artist of Distinction.[2] Equus Magazine included him in their list of the world’s most influential horsemen of the 20th century. Savitt is the cofounder of the American Academy of Equine Art, with Henry Koehler, Marilyn Newmark, and June Harrah.[8] With his wife, Bette, he opened Black Horse Press in 1963, which sold his charts and reproductions of his pieces. His works have been used as the illustrative basis of home furnishings and décor by various companies.[9]

Later life and death

Savitt died at the age of 83, in 2000.[2]

List of works

Author

  • Step-A-Bit; the story of a foal (1956)
  • Midnight, champion bucking horse (1957)
  • There was a horse (1961)
  • Around the world with horses (1962)
  • Rodeo: cowboys, bulls, and broncos (1963)
  • Vicki and the Black Horse (1964)
  • A Day at the LBJ Ranch (1965)
  • America's Horses (1966)
  • The equestrian Olympic sketchbook (1969)
  • True horse stories (1970)
  • Ups and downs; a first guide to riding and horse care (1973) (co-author: Suzanne Wilding)
  • Wild Horse Running (1973)
  • Vicki and the Brown Mare (1976)
  • Great Horses of the United States Equestrian Team (1977) (co-author: William Steinkraus)
  • The Dingle Ridge Fox and other stories (1978)
  • Draw Horses with Sam Savitt (1981)
  • One horse, one hundred miles, one day: the story of the Tevis Cup endurance ride (1981)
  • A horse to remember (1984)

Illustrator (selected)

  • Lad: A Dog by Albert Payson Terhune (1959 anniversary edition)
  • Pets at the White House by Carl Carmer (1959)
  • A saddlebag of tales; a collection of stories, by members of Western Writers of America (1959)
  • Fury and the Mustangs by Albert G. Miller (1960)
  • Horse in Her Heart by Patsey Gray (1960)
  • Horseback Riding (A Sports Illustrated book) (1960)
  • Born to Race by Blanche Chenery Perrin (1962)
  • Dinny and Dreamdust by Doris McFerran Townsent (1962)
  • Fawn in the Forest by Jim Kjelgaard (1962)
  • Show Ring Rogue by Patsey Gray (1963)
  • Two Dogs and a Horse by Jim Kjelgaard (1964)
  • Wild Horse Tamer by Glenn Balch (1964)
  • The Big book of favorite horse stories by P.C. Braun, ed. (1965)
  • Big Jump for Robin by Suzanne Wilding (1965)
  • Christy finds a rider by Elizabeth Harrover Johnson (1965)
  • Dave and his dog, Mulligan by Jim Kjelgaard (1966)
  • About Horses by Luther Dexter (1968)
  • The golden book of horses by George McMillan (1968)
  • Ride, gaucho by Bruce Grant (1969)
  • Sky rocket; the story of a little bay horse by Margaret Cabell Self (1970)
  • Wild animal rescue! by Bryan O'Donoghue (1971)
  • How to bring up your pet dog; choosing, understanding, training, protecting, enjoying by Kurt Unkelbach (1972)
  • Hundred Horse Farm by Blanche Chenery Perrin (1973)
  • Summer Pony by Jean Slaughter Doty (1973)
  • A boy and a pig, but mostly horses by Sherman Kent (1974)
  • The Gallant Gray Trotter by John T. Foster (1974)
  • Backyard pony: selecting and owning a horse by Frederick L. Devereux (1975)
  • How to take care of your horse until the vet comes: a horse health and first aid guide by Herb Marlin (1975)
  • Horse tales by Suzanne Wilding, ed. (1976)
  • The tale of the horse by Walter L. Field (1977)
  • Pluto: brave Lipizzaner stallion by Anne Colver (1978)
  • Springfellow by Robert Kraus (1978)
  • How to teach an old dog new tricks: retraining the secondhand dog by Kurt Unkelbach (1979)
  • My Mane Catches the Wind, poems about horses (1979)
  • Hiboy: Young Devil Horse by Justin F. Denzel (1980)

References

  1. ^ a b "About Sam Savitt". Bette Savitt. Retrieved January 10, 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Pace, Eric (December 30, 2000). "Sam Savitt, 83, Artist and Author Who Specialized in Horses, Dies". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 2, 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b Hale, Cindy (2012-04-03). The Horse Book of Lists: 968 Fascinating Facts & Tantalizing Trivia. ISBN 9781937049874.
  4. ^ Biscotti, M. L. (2010-04-16). Paul Brown: Master of Equine Art. ISBN 9781461635796.
  5. ^ Gatto, Kimberly (2014-07-08). Sandsablaze: Grand Prix Greatness from Harrisburg to the Olympics. ISBN 9781625850638.
  6. ^ Laffaye, 184.
  7. ^ a b https://equusmagazine.com/horse-world/eqdrawing2506
  8. ^ Laffaye, Horace A. (2014-01-10). Polo in the United States: A History. ISBN 9780786480074.
  9. ^ http://www.thehuntmagazine.com/home-garden/2015/12/artist-turned-decorator/