The Colors of Racing

View All Posters

25 Years of the Travers

2010 Roommates

2009 Colonel John’s Walk

2008 Street Friends

2007 Settling In

2006 Red Paddock

2005 Storm Bird

2004 16 Minutes to Post

2003 First Race

2002 Backstretch Move

2001 Driving Home

2000 First Across

1999 By a Nose

1998 Clean Break

1997 Paddock Parade

1996 Wire to Wire

1995 Out in Front

1994 Stretch Drive

1993 The Long Wait

1992 Travers Paddock

1992 The Starting Gate

1991 Jockey’s Scales

1990 Lady in Red

1989 The Win

1988 Rain or Shine

1987 Pinnacles

1986 The Silks


Saratoga Travers Stakes Winners

Storm Bird

2005: The Travers 136th Running, Saratoga

One of the greatest thoroughbred races of 2004 almost was run underwater. During last year’s Travers Stakes in Saratoga Springs an enormous summer thunderstorm struck. Growing darker and more massive by the minute, the storm clouds turned day into night. Only the low-angle yellow lamps at the finish line illuminated the eerily darkened track. It had begun to rain earlier, but as jockey Edgar Prado rode the Belmont Stakes winner, Birdstone, across the finish line, the skies opened up. To say that it poured rain does not begin to describe the deluge and winds that followed. You couldn’t see ten feet. It was not a race that anyone who darted through the rain will soon forget. And so, my 20th Anniversary poster: “Storm Bird.”

2005: Storm Bird

$40 / $50

unsigned / signed
Travers or Saratoga

Poster
17" x 33" Open Edition

Giclée Print
Size: 8" x 14.5"
Paper: Stonehenge
Edition: 175 prints, plus artist’s proofs

Custom Prints:
We will gladly produce a custom giclée print to your size and paper specifications. Please contact us.

Notes:

A word of thanks — and admiration — for my long-time friend and colleague, Skip Dickstein. Skip is the photographer who took the unforgetable image of the 2004 Travers finish on which this year’s poster art is based. In the nearly 20 years I have worked with Skip, I have never seen anyone be so consistently in the right place at the right time and come back with the defining image as Skip Dickstein. He’d probably say it was luck or habit, but the horse racing world and I know better. Thanks Skipper, great image.

<< Mouse over image to see Saratoga version