Legendary West Texas artist Boyd Elder has died.
His daughter, Shaula Elder, confirmed the 74-year-old's death on Facebook Saturday night.
"The rumors are swirling about our father passing into the cosmos," the post reads. "It breaks my heart to say it is true. He is stardust."
The circumstances of Elder's death are unclear at this time.
Elder — who's known for his work on several Eagle's album covers, including the best-selling album of all time, 1976's Their Greatest Hits (1971-1975) — lived in Valentine, Texas, where he worked on his art out of an old barn.
“Most fine artists have their work in museums or collections,” Elder told Sterry Butcher for Texas Monthly earlier this year. “My work is in millions of households all over the world.”
Elder was born in El Paso, Texas but spent several years of his early childhood in Valentine, where his family had deep roots. His grandfather, a West Texas land and cattle baron, helped to plot the Valentine townsite in the late 1800s. But by the time Elder was in elementary school, his family moved to El Paso full time — much to his disappointment.
"I didn't have the outdoors," Elder told Marfa Public Radio in a 2010 interview. "I didn't have my horses and dogs. I didn't have my horses and dogs. I just didn't have the landscapes and vistas that you have here."
But even after Elder's family moved to El Paso, they would often visit Valentine during summer vacations and holidays.
Soon, Elder's bubbling interest in art grew from watercolors to pinstriping and painting hotrods that would blaze through the streets on El Paso nights.
"I was very much into cars and hot rods," Elder said in 2010. "I built dragsters, I pinstriped and painted motorcycles and cars."
While in school in El Paso, Elder pursued his interest in art, studying with several area artists. His weekends were filled with lessons at the El Paso Museum of Art. "You can teach drawing and music," Elder said in 2010. "I don't know if you can really teach art. It's kind of inherent."
Elder's high school teachers encouraged him to apply for art school and shortly after graduating, the native Texan headed West to the Chouinard Art Institute in California to study painting and sculpture. While in school, Elder would often drive up to Sunset Boulevard and hang out at the famed Troubadour nightclub — where he met musicians, painters, and writers, like David Crosby, Jackson Browne, and Joni Mitchell.
In 1972, Elder put on a one-man show in Venice — El Chingadero.
At the exhibition, a few of Elder's friends played their first public show as The Eagles.
“They had six or seven songs," Elder told Texas Monthly this year. "They played them all the way through, and when they got to the end, they played them again.”
The following year, in 1973, some of the work that Elder had displayed at El Chingadero was lost to a fire at his Valentine studio. With no local fire department to respond, the old family garage, which had become Elder's makeshift studio, burned completely.
He was left with nothing.
But shortly after, Elder received two wild steer skulls, a bull and a cow. So he painted them — pinstriped — just like he would to the hotrods he loved as a teenager. One of those skulls, he covered in a soft blue, adding reds and yellows, feathers and even wings.
It became the album art for the Eagles 1975 album One of These Nights.
The artist continued his work over the years and was a well-known presence in the Big Bend.
This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.