Home
Order online
or call us toll free
800-417-2790

Born Free and Equal
Ansel Adams

Climbing Mt. Whitney
Peter Croft, Glen Dawson

Close Ups of the High Sierra
Norman Clyde

Death Valley to Yosemite: Frontier Mining Camps and Ghost Towns
L. Burr Belden & Mary DeDecker

Desert Summits
Andy Zdon

Favorite Dog Hikes In and Around Las Vegas
Wynne Benti & Megan Lawlor

Favorite Dog Hikes In and Around Los Angeles
Wynne Benti

Grand Canyon Treks
Harvey Butchart

High and Wild: Essays and Photographs on Wilderness Adventure
Galen Rowell

Mojave Desert Trails
Florine Lawlor

Out From Las Vegas
Florine Lawlor

The Secret Sierra: The Alpine World Above the Trees
David Gilligan

Robert Clunie: Plein Air Painter of the Sierra
Richard Coons

Richard Coons

Author of the book, Robert Clunie Plein Air Painter of the Sierra, Richard Coons started painting when he was 47 years old. He was trained in the plein-air tradition by Robert Clunie (California Art Club, 1930-1958), Larry Kronquist, and marine painter, Bennett Bradbury. He studied at Laguna Beach Art School.

Inspired by the sea, the desert, but mostly by his beloved Sierra Nevada, he lived his entire life in the remote Eastern Sierra town of Bishop, California.

Born in Los Angeles, Coons was the son of William Coons, a hydrographer for the Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, and a surveyor on the construction of the Tioga Road on Yosemite's east side.

In the fall of 1945, Richard Coons was asked by his grandfather to assist him with a delivery of concrete blocks to newcomer and fine artist, Robert Clunie, for construction of Clunie's art studio on the North Fork of Bishop Creek and Sierra Highway. Then a student at Bishop Union High School in the Eastern Sierra, Coons was a ski racer and friend of Dave McCoy, founder of Mammoth Mountain Ski Area, Aware of the young man's notable track accomplishments as reported in the local newspaper, and as an athlete of some note himself, Clunie struck up a conversation about sports with Coons.

Destiny or chance, it was a meeting that changed the course of Richard Coons' life. Thirty years later, when he quit his business as a building contractor, gave away all of his possessions, choosing instead the path of a plein-air oil painter, the elder Clunie became his mentor. When Clunie died in 1984, Coons purchased his art studio and opened Coons Gallery. In 1998, Coons wrote and published the definitive volume on his mentor's life: Robert Clunie Plein-Air Painter of the Sierra.

An artist member of the California Art Club, Richard participated in many exhibitions, including several California Art Club Gold Medal Shows as well as a joint exhibition with Robert Clunie at the Ventura County Historical Museum. He won many awards and placed in the National Parks Art For the Parks Top 100 competition. He was a prolific painter, estimating having painted close to 4,000 realist canvases of the Sierra Nevada. His life as an artist in the remote Eastern Sierra is the subject of an upcoming biography.

Mt. Humphreys from the Buttermilks, original oil painting by Richard Coons