CHAMPION LANE FROST Monumental Bronze, 15’ x 11’ x 9’ World
Champion bull rider Lane Frost lost his life at age 25 competing in the 1989
Cheyenne Frontier Days rodeo. As a former bull rider, I wanted to honor the
great young man who paid the ultimate price doing what he had a passion and
love for, I decided to commission myself
as the artist. Champion Lane Frost is
always going to be one of my favorite sculptures because of all of the
difficulties and challenges it took to complete it. Every time I started
feeling good about the project, something would come along and knock me down.
Right out of the gate, the Cheyenne Frontier Days Rodeo Committee turned me
down, saying I would have to raise all of the funds on my own. My father
suffered a stroke just as I was starting the monument. He died on Nov. 8, 1992.
When I was nearly finished with the clay original, it burned up in a fire at
Caleco Foundry in Cody, Wyoming, on March 6, 1993. I was living in the foundry
when an electric heater warming the clay shorted out and started a fire in the
building. I awoke at 3 a.m. to find my room filled with smoke and called 911
before jumping out of the second story window. The volunteer fire department
arrived and extinguished the fire, but not before the surface of the clay
sculpture and most of my tools had been destroyed. I ordered new tools and clay
that very day and began working long hours to repair the damage. I was able to
finish the monument and delivered it just days before the dedication on July
26, 1993. This was my first large public monument and it will always have a
special place in my heart. Champion Lane Frost is located at Cheyenne Frontier
Days Old West Museum in Cheyenne, Wyoming.
Through its simple
truth, the following quote by Lane touches my heart and gives me strength. ''Don't be afraid to go after what you want
to do and what you want to be. But don't be afraid to be willing to pay the
price.'' ̶ Lane Frost
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