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2021 Works

American Me

Oil, acrylic paper ephemera, imitation eagle feathers, imitation elk-teeth on Panel on cotton string. 96”x48”. 2021. Private Collection

Future In Our Eyes

Commissioned by the Field Museum of Chicago. Available for Acquisition. Debuted at the Field Museum in Chicago, Travelled to the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, MT and subsequently travelled to the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburg, PA. Currently on Display at the Yellowstone Art Museum in Billings, MT.

Sitting Bird

Oil & gold leaf on canvas.
24”x30”. 2021. Private Collection

“Confluence- Chief Medicine Crow


Medicine Crow was a warrior from the time he first went on the warpath at the age of fifteen until his last battle in 1877. He attained chieftaincy about 1870 at the age of twenty-two, and from then on he set the pace for aspiring young warriors of his people. Until his death in 1920, at the age of seventy-two, he was a "reservation chief," concerned with helping the Crow tribe "learn to live in the ways of the white man" as soon and as efficiently as possible. He went to see the Great Father in Washington many times on behalf of his people.

Medicine Crow, whose name is more accurately translated as Sacred Raven, was born somewhere in the Musselshell country in 1848. His father, also a great chief, was Jointed Together, and his mother was One Buffalo Calf. This was a time of trial for the Absarokee, for the population of the tribe had been reduced from more than 8,000 to fewer than 1,000 by the smallpox epidemic of the mid-1840’s. Now the tribe had to be made strong again, lest surrounding hostile tribes succeed in finishing the job the deadly pox had begun—annihilating the Crows. Boys had to become men quickly. The youth of the Absarokee accepted the challenge. Some died on the warpath, but those who survived, the boyhood friends of Medicine Crow, became great warriors and wise chieftains. Among these were Plenty Coups and Two Leggings, well known to the white man, and others such as Two Belly, Pretty Eagle, Old Crow, Bellrock, and many more.

Medicine Crow lived his first fifteen years much as his father and forefathers had. As

“Half-Price, This Weekend Only”

Oil on Canvas. 48”x36” Available for Acquistion

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