A Cowboy Photographer Documenting the American West
For more than 6 years I’ve spent time on working cattle ranches across the American West, photographing the daily lives of the cowboys who keep those operations running. What began as a personal project slowly grew into a long-term body of work documenting ranch culture, tradition, and the quiet routines of life in the saddle.
Rather than staged imagery or romanticized versions of the cowboy, the photographs focus on real moments—early mornings gathering cattle, long days in the saddle, and the landscapes that shape ranch life.
Photographing Working Cowboys
The American cowboy remains one of the most recognizable figures in Western culture, but the reality of ranch work often looks very different from the Hollywood version. Life on a cattle ranch is built around early mornings, long hours horseback, harsh weather, and a deep understanding of the land and animals.
Photographing working cowboys requires time and patience. Many of the images in this project were made while spending days or weeks on ranches, quietly observing the rhythm of the work and waiting for moments that reveal the character of the people and the land around them.
Historic Ranches of the American West
Over the years this project has taken me to some of the most respected and historic ranches in the American West. Each ranch has its own traditions and way of doing things, but the values of hard work, horsemanship, and respect for the land remain constant.
Photographs from this series have been made on ranches such as the Haythorn Ranch in Nebraska, the legendary 6666 Ranch in Texas, and several historic Nevada operations known for their buckaroo traditions. These places continue to represent a living culture of ranching that has shaped the American West for generations.
The Culture of the Working Cowboy
What continues to draw me back to these ranches is the culture that surrounds the work. Ranch life is built around experience passed down through generations—how to read cattle, how to work a horse, and how to move animals across large stretches of open country.
The cowboys photographed in this series are not performers or actors. They are men and women whose lives are tied to the land and the responsibility of raising cattle in some of the most rugged landscapes in the country.
Explore the Working Cowboys of the American West
This project is part of a larger body of work documenting ranch culture and the lives of working cowboys across the American West. Over the past fifteen years I’ve spent time on historic ranches throughout the region, photographing the traditions, landscapes, and people who continue to shape this way of life.
You can view more photographs from the ongoing series Working Cowboys of the American West here.
Collecting Cowboy Photography Prints
Many of the photographs from this long-term project are available as museum-quality cowboy photography prints, created for collectors who appreciate authentic imagery of the American West.
These prints are often collected for ranch homes, Western interiors, and private collections that value the culture and traditions of ranch life.
Overlooking a canyon carved by time. Out here, the terrain dictates everything, and the scale of the land reminds you how small a cowboy and his horse really are.
Morning work on the 6666 Ranch. Small details tell the truth of ranch life—the worn leather, the dust, and the patience of a horse waiting for the day to begin.
Branding day in the high desert. Heat, dust, and a rhythm that hasn’t changed in generations—every person, horse, and moment working in unspoken coordination.
Catching horses on a cold morning at the Winecup-Gamble Ranch. Work continues no matter the season, and the landscape becomes part of the story—wide, unforgiving, and endlessly beautiful.
A band of horses moving through open country at first light. Scenes like this define the West—vast, quiet, and untouched except for the sound of hooves in the distance.
Morning coffee in the wagon tent. Before the work starts, there’s a few quiet minutes where everyone gathers, talks, and warms up for the long day ahead.
Early morning in the fog. Work starts long before the light shows itself, and the quiet of these hours reveals just how unforgiving and beautiful the job can be.
Riding out beneath a building summer storm. Moments like this are the rhythm of ranch life—weather, work, and landscape all moving together across the open West.