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Art of the Americas to World War I
Course: Art of the Americas to World War I > Unit 5
Lesson 3: West- Juana Basilia Sitmelelene, Presentation Basket (Chumash)
- War Shirt (Upper Missouri River)
- The power of the bear and the story an American massacre
- Eastern Shoshone: Hide Painting of the Sun Dance, attributed to Cotsiogo (Cadzi Cody)
- Buffalo Robe
- Feathered war bonnet
- Headdress (Cheyenne or Lakota)
- Mató Nájin/Standing Bear, Battle of Little Bighorn
- Two sides of Lakota life on a beaded suitcase
- Custer's Last Stand — from the Lakota perspective
- Paukeigope (Kiowa), Cradleboard
- Carrie Bethel, Basket bowl
- Allan Houser, “Earth Song”
- Brummett Echohawk, An Island of Redbuds on the Cimarron
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Brummett Echohawk, An Island of Redbuds on the Cimarron
Brummett Echohawk's "An Island of Redbuds on the Cimarron" beautifully blends nature and Native American heritage. The Pawnee artist's vibrant colors paint a serene landscape, showcasing his deep bond with the land. This artwork encourages viewers to value the natural world and its cultural importance. Created by Smarthistory.
Video transcript
(gentle piano jazz music) - [Host] We're at the Gilcrease
Museum in Tulsa, Oklahoma, standing before a painting
by Brummett Echohawk called "An Island of Redbuds
on the Cimarron" from 1968 and it is a tour to
force of color and light and the application of paint and it's very much rooted in
the land here in Oklahoma. Brummett Echohawk is a
part of a Pawnee family that was removed with the
rest of the Pawne nation. They lived on their
tribal reservation lands and then a few years later,
the Dawes Act came into being and everyone had to apply
to the US government to get a piece of land and then be decreed to be
officially an 'indian.' Then you were assigned an allotment. This is the sole illustration
of the family land allotment where his father grew
up and then he grew up and other generations are
still living on this land. There's a strong connection there still. So this was a very important area that he knew deeply and very closely. Native peoples often live along the rivers and I think there was a
feeling of a deep memory from where the Pawnee used to live in their homelands in Wichita. I think this painting
expresses this concept of home and a homeland that is more than important
to Native peoples. It's a living part of the life
of every Indigenous person and it has a deeply spiritual meaning. This is an Impressionist-style painting, but it has the feeling of the light that we have here in Oklahoma. I'm struck by the luminous
blue gray underpainting that we see in the lower left corner. But then, as our eye
moves towards the red bud, we see thicker application of
paint in greens and yellows and peaches and purples
and blues and oranges. He's not just painting
this landscape using one particular type of
brushstroke or even one technique. He's using a variety of textures to give us this impression
of the landscape. The petals of the red
bud are thickly applied, but we can see in the tree that he's probably used the end
of his brush and drawn lines, or maybe that's from the use of a knife. He actively used a bowie knife, and there are photos of
him painting with it, and you can see even
the points of the knife and the flat areas where
he smushed the paint along and the very thin lines
that are clearly made by a long, sharp edge,
probably of the Bowie knife. And we know that Echo Hawk
is painting outside often, although he started doing
drawings as an artist while he was in the Army in World War
II in the 45th Infantry. So he clearly had the
passion and innate skill. And then after the war, he went to the Detroit School of Arts and Crafts, and then the Art Institute
of Chicago, the school there. That must have been where he encountered the
Impressionist paintings. And throughout his lifetime, he comments on his artistic process, on artists that influenced him, and even on his training and what it meant for him to be an artist. He says at one point, "I want
to be able to take a color and add thunder and bounce to it. I want my work to come to life. Toulouse-Lautrec was touching on it. Van Gogh came very close." And so that suggests that
he thinks these artists came close to achieving
what he is able to do through having a deep connection
to these lands himself. Because Echohawk was Pawnee, many people who were non-Native wanted to see him as an Indian artist and felt that he should
be painting in a style that was read as more traditional. We are not that far removed
from, say, the Kiowa Six and other artists who painted
in a very different way. And Echohawk very much resisted that label and that type of style. In fact, the painting
that we're seeing here is one of many different ways
in which Echohawk painted. He seemed to have three
major ways of working. When he was younger and he was in the 45th Infantry in Italy, he did rapid, beautiful,
fresh, realistic sketches of scenes of the battlefield, and he used any kind of
material he could find, paper, cardboard, even paper
off of dead German soldiers. And then he had his very
realistic portrait style. He used some different techniques. And then these landscapes
were so much fresher in their paint handling and of course probably working outside. He was working rapidly
and inspired by the land and all that he saw around him
and the color and the light. And while he today is maybe
more well known in some circles for his realistic paintings, Echohawk himself felt
a certain affinity for these impressionistic paintings. And he even says that, "A
painting should be an investment. It should move you and
move you and move you. That's why I do
impressionistic landscapes. I am painting the spirit of a picture, not a picture of a picture." (gentle piano jazz music)