The Art of the Common Ground
As Seen in Treasure State Lifestyles Montana Magazine
Volume 22 Issue 02
Volume 22 Issue 02
Raffle drawing to be held Saturday, February 14, 2026
during the MCHF Annual Induction & Gathering Cowboy Ball
1st Place – Bronze, 2nd Place – $500 and 3rd Place – $250
Only 500 tickets available. Need not be present to win.
Tickets are $40 each
Learn more about the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame here.
That first beeswax sculpture of Tater now resides in the C.M. Russell Museum in Great Falls. In 2017, searching for inspiration, Jay revisited those cherished memories and sculpted Tater once again—this time in clay, later casting him in bronze. The first edition (1/100) was dedicated to the 2017 Alberta All-Around Rodeo Champion, and now, edition 4/100 will be raffled to support the Saddle Up Fundraiser 2025 for the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame.
Bronze Sculpture: Tater · Weight: 13 lbs · Dimensions: 8 x 6 x 10in · Edition: 100 · Year Created: 2017

Jay Contway’s original bronze sculpture, Almost Home, will be auctioned to benefit the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame during the MCHF Annual Induction & Gathering Cowboy Ball on February 8, 2025. Support this incredible organization, which Jay deeply cherished, by purchasing raffle tickets today.
Dimensions 22” L, 10” W, 15.75” H
Tickets are $50 each
Raffle drawing to be held Saturday, February 8, 2025
during the MCHF Annual Induction & Gathering Cowboy Ball
1st Place – Bronze, 2nd Place – $500 and 3rd Place – $250
Only 500 tickets available. Need not be present to win.
Buy your raffle tickets before they sell out! Call the MCHF office today at
406-653-3800.
Learn more about the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame Annual Induction & Gathering Cowboy Ball here.
Join Lynn Contway for a signing of her book Jay Contway, The Artist, The Cowboy, His Legacy at the Calgary Stampede, at the Old Time Ranch Rodeo.

Bar U Ranch National Historic Site
Old Time Ranch Rodeo
August 18, 2024 · 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM
West of High River, South of Longview, Alberta, Canada

Learn more about the Bar U Ranch National Historic Site here.

What a great show this year! Thank you all for making the book launch a success. Don’t worry if you weren’t able to get your copy of the first publication about Jay Contway and his amazing body of work for The Calgary Stampede, they are available at several of our partners and from Lynn here.
See you next year at the Great Western Show
400 3rd St. NW
Great Falls, MT 59404
Phone: (406) 727-8900
Just follow the orange banners
Click here for directions
Thursday
10:00am – 8:00pm
Friday
10:00am – 8:00pm
Saturday
10:00am – 8:00pm
Sunday
10:00am – 1:00pm
The first publication of Jay Contway’s amazing body of work of over forty years with The Calgary Stampede in Alberta, Canada is available here along with original art from the late Jay Contway.

For more information please contact Lynn Contway:
Canada: 403-994-1950
USA: 406-868-8684

This past year has been challenging; one never stops learning. I have missed Jay greatly but could not wish him back to have lived through the confinement caused by Covid 19. As his legacy keeper, I have placed many of his belongings in the Phillips County Museum in Malta, Montana and have added to the collection held by the C.M Russell Museum in Great Falls. I still have much to do in telling the Jay Contway story.
Jay always said, “No matter how tight things get, never stop casting bronze”, and so it continues. One of the foundries we use is closing so I have moved molds to storage and to the North West Art Casting Foundry in Bozeman. Scott Billis and his crew have worked for Jay for years so they are well suited to produce bronze from his own molds. I will continued to cast his sculpture and am blessed that it continues to sell.
Everything you see under The Work on this website, is available to be cast. For Christmas sales I have placed cast work in two galleries, Broadwater Tack in Townsend and the Brighten Up Shop in Great Falls. I also have work in my own storage. If you are thinking of a Jay Contway Bronze as a Christmas gift, all pieces to be shipped must be ordered by November 30.
Please call me for information about which Jay Contway Bronze pieces are available at this time.
Peace and best wishes for the holiday season. May 2021 be kinder to us all.
Sincerely,
Lynn Contway
Legacy Keeper

Dear patrons, family and friends:
Long before my husband, Jay Contway, reached the last chapter of his life we discussed the legacy he was leaving to the world of western art. Jay was truly grateful for his talent and his life. He loved the west and the cowboy life. He moved with complete ease between two cultures, the cowboy and the Indian. He was both, but more importantly, he valued both.
Jay entrusted me to protect his legacy. I am to continue to cast his bronze at the foundries he chose – to put his bronze into the hands and homes of those who value the stories he told through his art. The business will now be known as Jay Contway Legacy Art. His website will continue, changing as the editions of each sculpture is completed. All other forms of social media will continue to showcase Jay Contway Legacy Art. The annual Art Show will be held each March in Great Falls, Montana. I will work with Montana museums to ensure that Jay’s story is preserved for all time; for all peoples.
Jay was the artist, the storyteller. My memories are filled with the hours spent at our kitchen table, where he told the stories of his life and his art while I recorded them. Now I ask you, his friends and followers, to add to my collection of stories about Jay. The annual Jay Contway Art Show will provide you the opportunity to tell your stories of your relationship with Jay. I will condense these memories into collections I will share on social media. If you cannot join me in Great Falls, please take the time to write your stories of Jay and mail them to me.
Jay once told me that God put me in his path because he needed me. As I journey on, I will continue to honor the joy of Jay’s artistic legacy.
Sincerely,

Lynn Contway
Legacy Keeper

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Jay Joseph Contway was born February 13, 1935 in Malta, Montana and passed away November 21, 2019 in Great Falls, Montana. He was divinely blessed with a God-given talent for western art. He painted in watercolor and oil, but as we all know, his greatest gift was his ability to sculpt in clay and cast in bronze. No one made a better cow horse than Jay Contway. His attention to detail and action made him one of the best cowboy sculptors ever known.
Jay was educated in Malta, graduating from high school in 1953. He took a job that summer with an oil crew in Oklahoma, thus beginning a life of constant travel and education. Jay later obtained a teaching certificate from Northern Montana College in Havre and took his first teaching position in Loring in 1955. He taught in Lodge Pole, Dupuyer, New Miami Hutterite Colony, Cutbank, and Great Falls. When the school year ended so did the paychecks so Jay went to work in the arena calf roping during the summer rodeo season. He won the North Central Montana Rodeo Association calf roping championship in 1964, ’65, ’66 and filled his Professional Rodeo Cowboy’s Association permit.
When the art began to sell, Jay retired from teaching. Jay bought his property west of Great Falls in the spring of 1967 by selling a rope horse to J.O. Anderson to make the down payment. Eventually Jay was able to build his own foundry, thus controlling the entire process of his work from clay to casting. He closed his foundry at the age of 77 when his legs no longer had the strength to lift a crucible filled with boiling metal. His one constant was Shirley Turner, who helped him operate his foundry for 39 years. Her contribution to his art production was as important as his own. Jay moved his casting to Montana foundries and the work went on but for Jay, it was never as much fun as when he had complete command.
The Calgary Stampede in Alberta, Canada contributed to Jay’s worldwide recognition. For 31consecutive years the rodeo committee gave a Jay Contway bronze as part of their trophy program, allowing the provision of over 160 pieces of art for the stampede. During those years Jay displayed his art at the Calgary Stampede Western Art Show. Beginning in 1984 Jay contributed to the Quick Draw Program, a scholarship fund for southern Alberta youth. Jay continued to donate for 27 years becoming the only artist to make such a contribution. He displayed his art at the National Finals Rodeo Cowboy Christmas in Las Vegas for over 30 years. Jay featured and sold his art from box stalls and auction rings, to ballrooms and exhibition halls in more towns and cities than he could count, all while gathering a following of hundreds.
Jay’s travels took him through western United States and Canada, Mexico, the islands of the Bahamas, and among the art galleries of Europe. The art in Paris was outstanding but it was a small museum in Madrid that provided Jay the greatest inspiration of all. It was here that he saw the beginning of the Bronze Age. No explanation was necessary. Jay understood what he was looking at.
Over the years Jay won numerous awards but the most important recognitions of his career were the inductions into the Calgary Stampede Western Art Show Hall of Fame in 2009, the C.M. Russell Museum Skull Society of Artists 2014 & 2015, the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame and Western Heritage Center in 2015, and the Montana Pro-Rodeo Hall and Wall of Fame in 2016. His final salute came in September of 2019 when he received the Saddle of Honor Award from the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame and the C.M. Russell Museum.
Jay is survived by his wife, Lynn Contway of 23 years, his children from previous marriages, Bruce Contway (Kathy), Heidi Valdez (Jerry), Ross Contway (Tina), and Jayson Contway, three grandchildren Caitlyn, Mathew and Garrett, two great grandchildren and siblings Myrtle Pence, George Contway, Cathy Kuether, Doug Contway, and Lee Dorsey. He was predeceased by his daughter, Jennifer Keller, brother James Contway and sister Patsy Burckhard.
Jay will be greatly missed by his adopted brother, Ervin Watson. Jay was deeply loved by his large Canadian family including his step children Ryan (Kellie) Cartwright, Holly (Sean) LaBrie, grandchildren Kelsey, Kayla, Connor, Cole Cartwright and Taryn, Dalton LaBrie, many brothers and sisters-in-law, nieces and nephews, many of which shared his love of horses, notably Jordan and Carson Richardson.
Donations can be made in Jay Contway’s memory to the Phillips County Museum in Malta, Montana or the C.M. Russell Museum in Great Falls, Montana.
For 27 years Jay chose a Face in the Crowd at the Calgary Stampede and turned that unique face into a bronze sculpture. The sculptures were sold at auction and the proceeds supported the Youth Scholarship fund for art.
Jay kept track of many of his models but lost a few over the years. He has just received a message from Facebook asking if Jay remembered a young man who sat for him in 1989. Wow, a voice from the past.
Jay knew him as “Singing with Old Men” but he had no other information. 29 years later he is known as Sings in the Trees (litstsaansski). His English name is Winston Wadsworth Jr. He is married to a lovely lady named Katelyn. They have 7 children and 4 grandchildren with one on the way. Winston is a traditional artist and teacher. He and Katelyn specialize in hide tanning, quillwork, beadwork, pottery etc. His father is from the Kainai (Blood) Tribe and his mother is from the Tsuut’ina Nation. The family tipi, which is still set up every year for the Calgary Stampede, is in the care of Teresa Big Plume and has been at the Stampede since 1912.
You can participate in Jay’s history by liking this facebook page here, who knows the connections you will make!
We hope you had a chance to meet Jay Contway in person and see his artwork at the annual Jay Contway & Friends Art Show · March 15-17, 2018. You can check out all the fun videos on Facebook from this year’s show here.
Check out all of Jay Contway’s videos on his YouTube Channel here.
This is an intimate show with all artists in attendance that we put on every year. At our last show, new talent brought sculpture and jewelry cast in gold and silver in addition to your favorites; sculpture, paintings, scratchboard, woodwork, jewelry, leather-work, and pottery.
Jay was joined by 11 of his hand-picked Artist friends. Some old friends, some new! He hopes you enjoyed meeting them and experiencing their unique artwork as much as he did. You can follow each of the artists’ links below to see a sampling of their work and learn more about them.
Attending Artists at the 2018 Jay Contway & Friends Art Show were:
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Sculpture
[Website][Facebook][/themify_col] [themify_col grid=”3-1″]
Sculpture, painting, illustration, knife making, cowboy poetry/folklore
[Website][/themify_col][themify_col grid=”3-1″]
Woodworking
[Website][Facebook][/themify_col]
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Ceramics
[Website][Facebook][/themify_col] [themify_col grid=”3-1″]
Rawhide & Horsehair
[Website][Facebook][/themify_col][themify_col grid=”3-1″]
Sculpture & Painting
[Website][/themify_col]
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Silver Jewelry
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Jewelry & Sacred Objects
[Website][Facebook][/themify_col][themify_col grid=”3-1″]
Handcrafted Montana Jewelry
[Website][/themify_col]
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Scratchboard
[Website][Facebook][/themify_col] [themify_col grid=”3-1″]
Sculpture, Handtooled Leather, Pen & Ink
[Facebook][/themify_col][themify_col grid=”3-1″]
Sculpture
[Website][Facebook][/themify_col]
Be sure to like Jay’s Facebook page to automatically see all the other 50 Moment in Time stories to come throughout the year. You can also subscribe to receive a monthly email of the stories from the Jay Contway Moment in Time Project and exclusive offers here.
To see all the February 2018 posts click here
To see all the January 2018 posts click here
To see all the December 2017 posts click here
To see all the November 2017 posts click here
To see all the October 2017 posts click here
To see all the September 2017 posts click here
To see all the August 2017 posts click here
To see all the July 2017 posts click here