Shield
CultureArikara, North Dakota
Dateca. 1850
MediumBuffalo rawhide, native tanned leather, and native pigment
DimensionsOverall: 20 inches (50.8 cm)
Credit LinePurchase: Donald D. Jones Fund for American Indian Art
Object number2004.35
On View
On viewGallery Location
- 208
Collections
DescriptionCircular rawhide shield with soft deerskin cover painted with the image of a buffalo's head and upper body; buffalo's head depicted facing the viewer; painted in dark brown and pale green.Gallery LabelThis object is a masterpiece of Plains Indian visionary painting. The deerskin cover of the heavy rawhide shield is embellished with the image of a buffalo bull, the owner’s guardian spirit, which would have been revealed to him in a vision during a period of prolonged fasting and prayer. The painting depicts the very moment of spiritual encounter—the artist’s transcendent revelation and profound connection with the supernatural. The intensity of this experience is conveyed through the precise delineation of form; the sense of immediacy and gesture inherent in the handling of paint and visual texture; and the bold composition and unusual development of pictorial space. Most immediately, the artist’s vision is established through the dramatic depiction of the animal itself— upswept horns, iconic hoof and direct, unwavering gaze.
Gaylord Torrence, ed. "Continuum: North American Native Art at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art” (The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, 2020), 187-186.
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