Carrie Fell
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About Faith
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Affection for Miles
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Best of Show
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Big
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Blu Rock Flower
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Blue Sky Thinking
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Bold Blossom
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Bold Blossom
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Common Ground
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Cool Waters
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Country Wide Mile St. 2
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Cover Band
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Cowboy Credo
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Cowboy Poets
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Dusty Charmer
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Flower Patch
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Good Company
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Good Company
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Horse of the Blue Sky
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Justice Grey
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Long Drive
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Looking To Reach The Stars
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Mangy Moose Coffee
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Ol' 55
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One Tough Crowd
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One Tough Hombre
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Over the Moon
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Over the Moon Saloon
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Perfect Storm
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Pop Flora
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Portrait of an American Horse
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Ranch Dress'n
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Rockin' Ranch
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Rope Opera DUDE
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Sassy
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Sheltering Sky
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Sixteen Hands
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Soul Progression
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Standing in the Shade of the Wagon
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Stormbreakers
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Swagger Jack
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The Posse
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Trick Ponies
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Wild Bunch
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Wind In A Box
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Wooly Bully
Throughout her twenty-year career, Carrie has exhibited her work nationally through numerous well-respected fine art galleries achieving both private and corporate collector recognition. Carrie is active and generous with both her donations and time serving numerous charitable organizations. In 1996, she established Significance of Self, a creative residency program designed to integrate charity performance and promote young people in their expression through art. She is an artist who expands the boundaries of traditional Western art by presenting Western subjects in new ways. Through her work Carrie tells the familiar stories of the West, stories of cowboys and cowgirls and horses and the infinite sky. Her dramatic use of color and line set Carrie Fell apart from conventional Western art style. With deft drawing and bold color, she imparts life and feeling to her frequently faceless subjects, from longhorns to cowgirls. A native of Denver, Carrie Fell began her professional career as an artist in 1985. She studied interior design in college; remnants of the drawing style of design work are intrinsic to her art. Her use of color, line and negative space also reflect her early training. Fell’s art hangs in the collections of individuals, corporations and institutions throughout North America and abroad. She exhibits year-round in numerous galleries and museums. In 2007, the Booth Western Art Museum in Cartersville, Georgia acquired her painting, “Crazy Mountain Saddle Slickers” for their permanent collection. In 2010, her original, “Rusty and Calamity” was acquired by the Desert Caballeros Western Museum in Wickenburg as part of their permanent collection.