THE PLAINS INDIANS: Artists Of The Earth And Sky

A new exhibition celebrating North American Indian art from the past and present

1 Apr 2015

The Third Eye Magazine_Plain Indians-Exhibition_Metropolitan Museum art- Calling on Wakan Tanka
Calling on Wakan Tanka, 1962 by Oscar Howe, Mazuha Hokshina, Trader Boy (1915-1983), Yanktonai, South Dakota. Paper, casein 22 3/8 x 31 . in. (56.8 x 79.4 cm).Vermillion (South Dakota), The University of South Dakota, donation from the artist.

 

It’s not often enough that North American Indian art and culture are celebrated in the Western art world. But the new major exhibition at New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Plains Indians: Artists of the Earth and Sky, opens the door to Native art, present and past. From drawings, sculptures and dress from precontact times to contemporary Native artists working in photography, painting and film, the exhibition explores the aesthetics, storytelling and spirit of North American Indian art.

 

 

Texan Killed and Utes / Killed Heap Squaws and Papoos, before 1868 by Little Shield (unknown dates), Arapaho, Colorado. Paper, graphite, ink (two of 23 drawnigs originally contained within a bound book) (8.3 x 14 cm) St. Louis (Missouri), University of Missouri-St. Louis, The St. Louis Mercantile Library, gift of William H. Rennick, 1890.
Texan Killed and Utes / Killed Heap Squaws and Papoos, before 1868 by Little Shield (unknown dates), Arapaho, Colorado. Paper, graphite, ink (two of 23 drawnigs originally contained within a bound book) (8.3 x 14 cm) St. Louis (Missouri), University of Missouri-St. Louis, The St. Louis Mercantile Library, gift of William H. Rennick, 1890.

 

Artworks created towards the end of the 19th century speak of the North American Indians’ loss of land and struggle to survive. Battle scenes plague some drawings created in the period of time when the US government seized 90 millions of acres of American Indian lands by treaty and executive order, forcibly evicting communities from their ancestral lands, depriving them of the natural resources that sustained them, in order to sell allotments to whites.

 

 

The Third Eye Magazine_Plain Indians_Artists Earth-Sky-2014 Exhibition-06
Wounded Knee #III, 2001 by Arthur Amiotte (1942-), Oglala Lakota (Teton Sioux), South Dakota Canvas, paper, ink (91.4 cm x 121.9 cm). Chicago (Illinois), The University of Chicago, lent by the David and Alfred Smart Museum of Art.

 

In the historical absence of written language, art is where the underpinning of tribal thought and values are encrypted.
— Arthur Amiotte

 

In a painting featuring Chief Sitting Bull, an icon of the American Indian resistance, contemporary Oglala Lakota artist Arthur Amiotte recalls the 1890 massacre at Wounded Knee in South Dakota where 300 American Indians, mostly unarmed women and children, were killed by the US cavalry.

 

 

Four Seasons Series, 2006 by Wendy Red Star (1981-), Crow, Billings, Montana. Archival pigment print on Museo silver rag on dibond 35.5 x 37 in. each panel. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas.
Four Seasons Series, 2006 by Wendy Red Star (1981-), Crow, Billings, Montana. Archival pigment print on Museo silver rag on dibond 35.5 x 37 in. each panel. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas.

 

Today’s confrontation between modern civilisation and indigenous tradition is aptly captured in Native visual artist Wendy Red Star’s self portrait series “Four Seasons”, which wittingly challenges Western culture’s folklorisation and representation of Native peoples. In dioramas of artificial natural landscapes, Wendy poses in traditional Crow dress. “The Four Seasons series is a remark on everything being constructed and fake except me and my culture,” Red Star has said.

 

 

Peyote Box, c. 1975. Johnny Hoof (unknown dates), Arapaho, Oklahoma. Commercial leather, metal, pigment. Tulsa (Oklahoma), Gilcrease Museum, gift of Pearl Big Bow.
Peyote Box, c. 1975. Johnny Hoof (unknown dates), Arapaho, Oklahoma. Commercial leather, metal, pigment. Tulsa (Oklahoma), Gilcrease Museum, gift of Pearl Big Bow.

 

Rich in symbolic design, artefacts such as a robe with a Thunderbird, an embroidered medicine bag or a peyote box tell the story of a people, culture and identity deeply interlinked with the land – nature not as something to be conquered and exploited, but as a living part of ourselves. These works speak of the spiritual forces of life, evoking the shamanic traditions of many First Nations such as the Lakota, Crow, Cheyenne and Blackfeet.

Perhaps most haunting are works and artefacts evoking the millenial spiritual movement known as the Ghost Dance, which emerged amongst the Plains Indians in the 1880s. In a time of loss and despair, the Ghost Dance was a ceremonial dance that promised to conjure the return of a precontact lost world, where the land would be American Indian once again, the Earth regenerated, the buffalo plentiful and the dead revived. A dream drawing depicting a warrior horned deity on an eagle-bison creature was created during this time by Black Hawk, a traditional medicine man who may have died with other Ghost Dance followers at Wounded Knee.

 

 

Dream or Vision or Himself Changed to a Destroyer or Riding a Bufalo Eagle, 1880 – 1881. Drawing by Black Hawk (1832?-c. 1889?), Sans Arc Lakota (Teton Sioux), South Dakota. Paper, ink, graphite 10 x 16 in. (25.4 x 40.6 cm). Cooperstown (New York), Fenimore Art Museum, The Thaw Collection, gift of Eugene V. and Clare E.
Dream or Vision or Himself Changed to a Destroyer or Riding a Bufalo Eagle, 1880 – 1881. Drawing by Black Hawk (1832?-c. 1889?), Sans Arc Lakota (Teton Sioux), South Dakota. Paper, ink, graphite 10 x 16 in. (25.4 x 40.6 cm). Cooperstown (New York), Fenimore Art Museum, The Thaw Collection, gift of Eugene V. and Clare E.

 

Works such as “Calling on Wakan Tanka” representing the Great Spirit, painted in the Sixties, testify to the incredible power of adaptation and creativity of the Plains Indians through the ages, carried on and alive through this day.

 

Text by Sophie Pinchetti

 

 

“The Plains Indians: Artists of Earth and Sky” is on view through May 10 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. It was organised by the Musée du quai Branly, Paris, in collaboration with The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and in partnership with The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City.

 

 

A Man Receiving Power from Two Spirit Animals, 1877. Drawing by Wohaw (1855-1924), Kiowa, Oklahoma. Pencil and colored pencil on crayon. 8 . x 11 3/8 in. (21 x 28.9 cm) St. Louis (Missouri), Missouri History Museum.
A Man Receiving Power from Two Spirit Animals, 1877. Drawing by Wohaw (1855-1924), Kiowa, Oklahoma. Pencil and colored pencil on crayon. 8 . x 11 3/8 in. (21 x 28.9 cm) St. Louis (Missouri), Missouri History Museum.
Untitled (Native Americans wearing headdresses on horseback), c. 1910 Photographed by Richard Throssel (Cree, adopted Crow; 1882-1933). Gelatin silver print on paper. Museum of Photographic Arts.
Untitled (Native Americans wearing headdresses on horseback), c. 1910 Photographed by Richard Throssel (Cree, adopted Crow; 1882-1933). Gelatin silver print on paper. Museum of Photographic Arts.
Drawing, c. 1830 Attributed to Wacochachi (unknown dates), Meskwaki, Iowa Paper, ink, sealing wax (24.8 x 39. 4 cm) Des Moines (Iowa), The State Historical Museum of Iowa.
Drawing, c. 1830 Attributed to Wacochachi (unknown dates), Meskwaki, Iowa. Paper, ink, sealing wax (24.8 x 39. 4 cm) Des Moines (Iowa), The State Historical Museum of Iowa.
Robe with Mythic Bird, c. 1700 – 1740. Eastern Plains artist, probably Illinois, Mid-Mississippi River basin. Native tanned leather, pigment 42 3/8 x 47 7/8 in. (107.7 x 121.4 cm) Musée du quai Branly, France.
Robe with Mythic Bird, c. 1700 – 1740. Eastern Plains artist, probably Illinois, Mid-Mississippi River basin. Native tanned leather, pigment 42 3/8 x 47 7/8 in. (107.7 x 121.4 cm) Musée du quai Branly, France.
Group on Horseback, c. 1928. Horace Poolaw (1906-1984), Kiowa, Oklahoma 8 in. x 10 in. Horace Poolaw Collection, University of Science & Arts of Oklahoma.
Group on Horseback, c. 1928. Horace Poolaw (1906-1984), Kiowa, Oklahoma 8 in. x 10 in. Horace Poolaw Collection, University of Science & Arts of Oklahoma.

 

The white people, who are trying to make us over into their image, they want us to be what they call “assimilated,” bringing the Indians into the mainstream and destroying our own way of life and our own cultural patterns. The white man says, there is freedom and justice for all. We have had “freedom and justice,” and that is why we have been almost exterminated. We shall not forget this.

From the 1927 Grand Council of American Indians

 

 

Ma-ka’tal-na’-zin (One Who Stands on the Earth), 38 signs from Building Minnesota (site specific public work), 1990 by Edgar Heap of Birds, Hock E Aye Vi. Enamel on aluminum 18 x 36.25 x .0625 in. Collection Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. Acquired in conjunction with the exhibition Claim Your Color: Hachivi Edgar Heap of Birds (1990), 1993.
Ma-ka’tal-na’-zin (One Who Stands on the Earth), 38 signs from Building Minnesota (site specific public work), 1990 by Edgar Heap of Birds, (Hock E Aye Vi is his Cheyenne name). Enamel on aluminum 18 x 36.25 x .0625 in. Collection Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. Acquired in conjunction with the exhibition Claim Your Color: Hachivi Edgar Heap of Birds (1990), 1993.
Horse Mask, Blackfeet, 19th century. Tanned buffalo hide, cotton cloth, ribbon, wood, brass tacks, glass beads, ochre (45.7 cm x 26.7 cm) Buffalo Bill Center of the West, Cody, Wyoming, U.S.A.
Horse Mask, Blackfeet, 19th century. Tanned buffalo hide, cotton cloth, ribbon, wood, brass tacks, glass beads, ochre (45.7 cm x 26.7 cm) Buffalo Bill Center of the West, Cody, Wyoming, U.S.A.
Gauntlets, c. 1890. Sioux-Métis artist, North or South Dakota. Native tanned leather, glass and brass beads, cotton cloth. 14 ó x 8 in. (36.8 x 20.3 cm) United States, Hirschfield Family Collection, Courtesy of Berte and Alan Hirschfield.
Gauntlets, c. 1890. Sioux-Métis artist, North or South Dakota. Native tanned leather, glass and brass beads, cotton cloth. 14 ó x 8 in. (36.8 x 20.3 cm) United States, Hirschfield Family Collection, Courtesy of Berte and Alan Hirschfield.
Four Seasons Series, 2006 by Wendy Red Star (1981-), Crow, Billings, Montana. Archival pigment print on Museo silver rag on dibond 35.5 x 37 in. each panel. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas.
Four Seasons Series, 2006 by Wendy Red Star (1981-), Crow, Billings, Montana. Archival pigment print on Museo silver rag on dibond 35.5 x 37 in. each panel. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas.
Four Seasons Series, 2006 by Wendy Red Star (1981-), Crow, Billings, Montana. Archival pigment print on Museo silver rag on dibond 35.5 x 37 in. each panel. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas.
Four Seasons Series, 2006 by Wendy Red Star (1981-), Crow, Billings, Montana. Archival pigment print on Museo silver rag on dibond 35.5 x 37 in. each panel. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas.
Four Seasons Series, 2006 by Wendy Red Star (1981-), Crow, Billings, Montana. Archival pigment print on Museo silver rag on dibond 35.5 x 37 in. each panel. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas.
Four Seasons Series, 2006 by Wendy Red Star (1981-), Crow, Billings, Montana. Archival pigment print on Museo silver rag on dibond 35.5 x 37 in. each panel. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, Kansas.
Woman’s Dress, c. 1900. Dakota (Eastern Sioux), Yanktonai or Lakota (Teton Sioux) artist, Fort Peck Reservation (Montana). Native tanned leather, glass, brass and steel-cut beads, metal cones, horsehair 48 x 39 in. (121.9 x 99.1 cm). Washington (District of Columbia), Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History.
Woman’s Dress, c. 1900. Dakota (Eastern Sioux), Yanktonai or Lakota (Teton Sioux) artist, Fort Peck Reservation (Montana). Native tanned leather, glass, brass and steel-cut beads, metal cones, horsehair 48 x 39 in. (121.9 x 99.1 cm). Washington (District of Columbia), Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of Natural History.
Quilt, c. 1915 by Rebecca Blackwater (unknown dates), Dakota (Eastern Sioux) or Lakota (Teton Sioux), Santee (Nebraska) or Rosebud (South Dakota). Cotton cloth, cotton thread 78 x 70 in. (198.1 x 177.8 cm) United States, Joan and Bill Alfond Collection.
Quilt, c. 1915 by Rebecca Blackwater (unknown dates), Dakota (Eastern Sioux) or Lakota (Teton Sioux), Santee (Nebraska) or Rosebud (South Dakota). Cotton cloth, cotton thread 78 x 70 in. (198.1 x 177.8 cm) United States, Joan and Bill Alfond Collection.
Last Lakota Horse Raid, 1991. Rhonda Holy Bear, Wakah Wayuphika Win, Making Beauty with Exceptional Skills Woman (1959 -), Sans Arc, Two Kettle and Hunkpapa Lakota (Teton Sioux), Cheyenne River and Standing Rock Reservations (North and South Dakota) Wood (basswood), native tanned and commercial leather, glass beads, pigment, cotton cloth, hair, dentalium shells, abalone, German silver, metal cones, brass tacks and beads, H: 30 in. (76.2 cm). United States, Collection of Joyce Chelberg.
Last Lakota Horse Raid, 1991. Rhonda Holy Bear, Wakah Wayuphika Win, Making Beauty with Exceptional Skills Woman (1959 -), Sans Arc, Two Kettle and Hunkpapa Lakota (Teton Sioux), Cheyenne River and Standing Rock Reservations (North and South Dakota) Wood (basswood), native tanned and commercial leather, glass beads, pigment, cotton cloth, hair, dentalium shells, abalone, German silver, metal cones, brass tacks and beads, H: 30 in. (76.2 cm). United States, Collection of Joyce Chelberg.
Kiowa Sun Dancer, c. 1930 by Spencer Asah, Kiowa. Tempera on paper 9 7/8 in. x 6 3/16 in. The Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, the University of Oklahoma.
Kiowa Sun Dancer, c. 1930 by Spencer Asah, Kiowa. Tempera on paper 9 7/8 in. x 6 3/16 in. The Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art, the University of Oklahoma.
Man’s Shirt, c. 1750 by Northern Plains artists, probably Arapaho or Gros Ventre. Native tanned leather, porcupine quills, pigment (81 x 53.6 cm). Paris (France), musée du quai Branly.
Man’s Shirt, c. 1750 by Northern Plains artists, probably Arapaho or Gros Ventre. Native tanned leather, porcupine quills, pigment (81 x 53.6 cm). Paris (France), musée du quai Branly.

 

What is life?
It is the flash of a firefly in the night.
It is the breath of a buffalo in the wintertime.
It is the little shadow, which runs across
the grass and loses itself in the sunset.
Crowfoot, Blackfoot warrior and orator 1830 – 1890

 

 

Wind Spirit, c.1955 by Blackbear Bosin, Francis Blackbear Bosin, Tsate Kongia, Blackbear (1921-1980), Comanche-Kiowa, Oklahoma. Paper, watercolor 23 x 33 5/8 in. (58.4 x 85.4 cm) Tulsa (Oklahoma), Philbrook Museum of Art and Nola Bosin Kimble Estate.
Wind Spirit, c.1955 by Blackbear Bosin, Francis Blackbear Bosin, Tsate Kongia, Blackbear (1921-1980), Comanche-Kiowa, Oklahoma. Paper, watercolor 23 x 33 5/8 in. (58.4 x 85.4 cm)
Tulsa (Oklahoma), Philbrook Museum of Art and Nola Bosin Kimble Estate.

 

Humankind has not woven the web of life.
We are but one thread within it.
Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves.
All things are bound together.
All things connect.
Chief Seattle, 1854

 

 

Ghost Dance Drum, c. 1891-1892. George Beaver (unknown dates), Pawnee, Oklahoma Wood, rawhide, pigment. Diameter: 23 in. (58.4 cm) Chicago (Illinois), The Field Museum of Natural History.
Ghost Dance Drum, c. 1891-1892. George Beaver (unknown dates), Pawnee, Oklahoma Wood, rawhide, pigment. In the 1880s, a millennial spiritual movement arose among Plains Indians, expressed in a ceremony called the GHOST DANCE. Diameter: 23 in. (58.4 cm) Chicago (Illinois), The Field Museum of Natural History.
 

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