Illustrations of the Manners, Customs, & Condition of the |
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George Catlin's paintings comprise the first important pictorial record of the Plains Indians and their then little-known homelands west of the Mississippi River. "Catlin's Indian Gallery," as the dedicated artist himself called it, consisted of hundreds of portraits of Indians, scenes of Indian life, and landscapes of a wilderness scarcely changed through the millennia. In his notebooks and on canvas, the young Pennsylvania lawyer captured much of an American that was swept away a century ago by the westward-pressing settler. Catlin made these dramatic paintings on a series of journeys into largely unmapped Indian country between 1830 and 1836. For the first time, Americans in the eastern states saw the Pawnees, the tall Blackfeet and Crows, the Sioux, and the wild Comanches. They saw wide prairies teeming with buffalo, the turbulent Missouri River, and the giant grizzly bear. They saw villages of hundreds of graceful teepees and peered into the dim interiors of comfortable earth lodges, and witnessed the four-day torture ceremony of the Mandans. The Plains Indians of Catlin's portraits were still proud and dignified, unlike their cousins on eastern reservations. Freed by the acquisition of the horse from the restrictions of hunger and scarcity, they were riding the crest of a new richness and power. But they, too, were fated to lose in the encounter with western civilization—and Catlin knew it. "Art may mourn when these people are swept from the earth," he wrote, "and the artists of the future ages may look in vain for another race so picturesque in their costumes, their weapons, their colours, their manly games, and their chase...." [ref.: "Letters and Notes..." introduction by Marjorie Halpin (Dover, 1973).] |
George Catlin "I sat out alone, unaided and unadvised, resolved, (if my life should be spared), by the aid of my brush and my pen, to rescue from oblivion so much of their primitive looks and customs as the industry and ardent enthusiasm of one lifetime could accomplish." GEORGE CATLIN, ca. 1842
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PLEASE CLICK ON A THUMBNAIL FOR AN ENLARGED VIEW (Colors represented on individual computer monitors will vary and may not accurately depict the actual lithographic color on the prints.) |
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Breaking down a wild horse |
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Ta-wah-que-nah, Mountain of Rocks, second chief Ish-a-ro-yeh, Carries a Wolf Is-sa-wah-tam-ah, Wolf Tied With Hair |
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Sky-se-ro-ka, second chief Kah-kee-tsee, The Thighs She-da-a, Wild Sage |
Bon-son-gee, The New Fire Quay-ham-kay, Stone Shell Wun-pan-to-mee, White Weasel and her brother, Tunk-aht-oh-ye, Thunderer |
Ush-ee-kitz, Fights with a Feather |
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Ah-ton-we-tuck, Cock Turkey Go-to-kow-pah-a, He Who Stands by Himself Wa-pon-je-a, The Swan |
Na-pow-saw, Bear Traveling in the Night Kee-mon-saw, Little Chief Wah-pe-seh-see, mother of Little Chief |
Kee-mo-ra-ni-a Ni-a-co-mo, To Fix with the Foot Men-son-se-ah, Left Hand |
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Non-on-da-gon, a chief Ee-tow-o-kaum, Both Sides of the River Wanu-naw-con, the Dish. John W. Quinney |
Cu-sick, son of the chief. A Baptist preacher Good Hunter Hard Hickory |
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H'co-a-h'co-a-h'cotes-min, No Horns on His Head Hee-doh'ge-ats, a young boy Chinook woman and child, showing how children's heads are flattened |
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Ka-te-qua, Female Eagle Pah-te-coo-saw, Straight Man Ten-squa-ta-way, The Open Door. "The Shawnee Prophet," brother of Tecumseh |
A Cherokee lady Jo-lee, a chief Tuch-ee, The Dutch |
Hol-te-mal-te-tez-te-neehk-ee, "Sam Perryman" Mo-sho-la-tub-bee, He Who Puts Out and Kills Ha-tchoo-tuck-nee, Snapping Turtle, "Peter Pinchlin" |
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