Featured in this lot is this Original painting titled "Custer's Attack At Washita" circa 1998 by artist Gary Zaboly born in 1949 and accompanied by a True West Magazine with the same artwork printed on the cover. Provenance: From The Gary Jacobson Estate. The painting features a wonderfully and professionally crafted construction showing The Attack at Washita showing mounted U.S. Cavalry soldiers attacking Cheyenne Indians in an early morning winter assault. The Attack at Washita (November 27, 1868) was a surprise winter assault by Lt. Col. George A. Custer and the 7th U.S. Cavalry on a peaceful Southern Cheyenne village. Often referred to as the Washita Massacre, it was a devastating event of the American Indian Wars and a core part of Major General Philip Sheridan’s "total war" strategy. The artwork is signed and marked in the bottom left hand corner as follows: Gary Zaboly - 1998. The January 1999 issue of True West magazine (Issue #369) is highly regarded by historians and collectors, primarily because it features the meticulously detailed, historically accurate artwork of Gary Zaboly. Gary Zaboly (1949-) is a highly acclaimed American historical illustrator and author, widely considered by curators to be the unofficial official artist of the Texas Revolution. Known for his meticulous, museum-grade attention to detail, his work brings gritty realism to pivotal moments in early American and frontier history. His artwork captures the raw, human experiences of "ordinary people" pushed into extraordinary wilderness and military conflicts. His illustrations are packed with painstakingly researched material culture, capturing everything from exact seam lines on period clothing to the mechanics of single-shot muskets. The condition of this painting is well preserved with no obvious signs of damage and shows a well preserved overall condition. The measurements of this framed painting and framed magazine is 23 3/4" x 29 3/4" and the visible artwork measures 14" x 20 1/8" and the measurements of the framed magazine is 10 3/4" x 13 1/4" and the visible artwork measures 8" x 10 1/2". The collective weight of both is 9lb 6oz.