Clay Dahlberg, western sculptor, had his sights set on becoming a cowboy right from the beginning. He was, after all, a Texas boy who had been born in San Antonio and would grow up in the Houston... Read full biography
Clay Dahlberg, western sculptor, had his sights set on becoming a cowboy right from the beginning. He was, after all, a Texas boy who had been born in San Antonio and would grow up in the Houston area. But while most city-born Texas boys were content with toy guns, stickhorses and Saturday... Read full biography
Clay Dahlberg, western sculptor, had his sights set on becoming a cowboy right from the beginning. He was, after all, a Texas boy who had been born in San Antonio and would grow up in the Houston area. But while most city-born Texas boys were content with toy guns, stickhorses and Saturday matinees, Clay Dahlberg went after the real thing. He had a Cotulla connection, an ancestral attachment to the South Texas brush country where the real cowboys came from. Clay Dahlberg's childhood experiences... Read full biography
Clay Dahlberg, western sculptor, had his sights set on becoming a cowboy right from the beginning. He was, after all, a Texas boy who had been born in San Antonio and would grow up in the Houston area. But while most city-born Texas boys were content with toy guns, stickhorses and Saturday matinees, Clay Dahlberg went after the real thing. He had a Cotulla connection, an ancestral attachment to the South Texas brush country where the real cowboys came from. Clay Dahlberg's childhood experiences from the summers he spent on a ranch near the small Texas town of Cotulla marked him for life. He absolutely idolized his great-grandfather, B. J. Pate, who seemed to have been born to be a brushpopper, as was his son, Clay's Uncle Roy. These were... Read full biography
Clay Dahlberg, western sculptor, had his sights set on becoming a cowboy right from the beginning. He was, after all, a Texas boy who had been born in San Antonio and would grow up in the Houston area. But while most city-born Texas boys were content with toy guns, stickhorses and Saturday matinees, Clay Dahlberg went after the real thing. He had a Cotulla connection, an ancestral attachment to the South Texas brush country where the real cowboys came from. Clay Dahlberg's childhood experiences from the summers he spent on a ranch near the small Texas town of Cotulla marked him for life. He absolutely idolized his great-grandfather, B. J. Pate, who seemed to have been born to be a brushpopper, as was his son, Clay's Uncle Roy. These were his heroes, not the flimsy illusion of fiction, but the rough-hewn reality of ranch life and of men made for hard country and horses.The i... Read full biography
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