Description:

G. Harvey
(1933-2017)
A Breed Apart, 1981
bronze, studio copy
inscribed: studio copy, 'A Breed Apart', G. Harvey © 1981; foundry mark: Mesa TK (Mesa Bronze Foundry, Center Point, Texas)

  • Provenance: The Estate of Josiah O. Low, Riverside, Connecticut
    Purchased from the artist

    Josiah O. "Joe" Low III, known as "The Wall Street Cowboy", was an investment banker with New York City roots and a love of Western art. Though he carried prestigious New York City blood in his veins (his great-great-uncle, Seth Low, served as Columbia University president from 1890–1901 and later as New York City's mayor), Low found his greatest joy in the open landscapes of the American West; he was a true cowboy at heart, with an abiding passion for Western art and culture.

    Low's childhood was spent as a ranch hand at his family's guest ranch, French Creek, in Wyoming's Platte River Valley. Following his college years at Williams College, Low headed east and started at Merrill Lynch's trainee program before becoming a founding Managing Director in their Capital Markets Group. In the early part of his career, he worked closely with Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette, eventually helping to build DLJ's corporate finance division. Colleagues remember him not just for his blue-chip acumen and unwavering integrity, but also for how seamlessly he blended financial rigor with a cowboy's openness, a duality epitomized, they say, by the saddle he kept in his car trunk.

    Low's legacy lies in how he bridged those two worlds. He took hundreds of Merrill Lynch and DLJ colleagues and clients to the A-Bar-A Ranch, just down the valley from French Creek, for annual week-long retreats. These Western-style getaways, complete with horses, hikes, and campfires, introduced many urban financiers to the romance of the West. As DLJ CEO Joe Roby observed, "It was great to get a bunch of corporate types from the East on horses in Wyoming."

    A friend of T. Boone Pickens, Low worked with him on several Mesa Petroleum transactions in the late 70s and the two found a common bond in collecting Western art, specifically the works of Texas artist G. Harvey. Low purchased his first G. Harvey painting "Wall Street" in 1980, presented in this auction as Lot 24. Later, Low coordinated Merrill Lynch's commission of G. Harvey's famous bronze longhorn, "A Breed Apart". This reflected the changeover from their "Bullish on America" ad campaign to "A Breed Apart", which remained the Merrill Lynch slogan for the next decade. Low owned a special studio copy of "A Breed Apart", presented in this auction as Lot 25.

    Lone Star Art Auction is proud to present several other works by G. Harvey and other artists from Low's prestigious collection in this year's auction.
  • Dimensions: 17 x 20 x 10 inches
  • Medium: bronze, studio copy
  • Condition: The sculpture appears to be in good condition with no evidence of damage or restoration. The bronze has a dark brown patina; it is mounted on a medium brown walnut wood base.

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November 1, 2025 12:00 PM CDT
Dallas, TX, US

Lone Star Art Auction

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Bid Increments
From: To: Increments:
$0 $1,999 $100
$2,000 $4,999 $250
$5,000 $9,999 $500
$10,000 $19,999 $1,000
$20,000 $49,999 $2,500
$50,000 $99,999 $5,000
$100,000 + $10,000