George Catlin's Obsession
No artist devoted himself more passionately to a single subject than George Catlin. An exhibition at the Renwick Gallery in Washington, D.C. asks: Did his work exploit or advance the American Indian?
- By Bruce Watson
- Smithsonian magazine, December 2002, Subscribe
One day in 1805, a 9-year-old boy exploring the woods along the Susquehanna River in southcentral New York came face-to-face with an Oneida Indian. The boy froze, terrified. Towering over him, the Indian lifted a hand in friendship. The boy never forgot the encounter or the man’s kindness. The experience may well have shaped George Catlin’s lifework.
Today Indians from nearly 50 tribes are gathered in the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington. There are Sioux, Crow, Kickapoo, Comanche, and many more, resplendent in full tribal dress. The faces of famous chiefs mix with those of young women and medicine men. A huge tepee sits in the middle of the gathering, and the sound of stampeding buffalo wafts through the galleries. Hundreds of paintings adorn the walls, accompanied by displays of artifacts—a buffalo headdress, arrows, beaded garments. At the center of it all is a lone white man—part showman, part artist—who devoted his life to preserving, in his words, “the looks and customs of the vanishing races of native man in America.”
In “George Catlin and His Indian Gallery” (through January 19, 2003), hundreds of stark, simple portraits stare impassively at visitors. The show, which also includes Catlin’s renderings of Indian rituals and landscapes of the prairie he traveled by steamboat, horseback and canoe in the 1830s, marks the first time in more than a century that Catlin’s paintings and the items he collected have been exhibited together in the manner he displayed them (1837-1850) in salons along the Eastern Seaboard and in London, Paris and Brussels. The artist, who was both heralded and criticized while he was alive, died in 1872 wondering what would happen to his gallery. “In his time, Catlin was considered a B painter, but he was a complex and fascinating figure,” says the exhibit’s cocurator George Gurney. “His collection is the largest of pre-photographic material of Native Americans. It’s an incredible record.”
Though not the first artist to paint American Indians, Catlin was the first to picture them so extensively in their own territories and one of the few to portray them as fellow human beings rather than savages. His more realistic approach grew out of his appreciation for a people who, he wrote, “had been invaded, their morals corrupted, their lands wrested from them, their customs changed, and therefore lost to the world.” Such empathy was uncommon in 1830, the year the federal Indian Removal Act forced Southeastern tribes to move to what is now Oklahoma along the disastrous “Trail of Tears.”
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Comments (9)
Im related to him!Its so fun when people know about your ansestors :):):)!!!
Posted by Amia on March 14,2013 | 08:27 PM
Just a question about the medium in which Catlin painted these amazing works. Are these oil paintings or watercolors or something else. Thanks, Arvind Garg
Posted by Arvind Garg Photography on December 16,2012 | 04:45 PM
10/14/10
Mr. Ellis,
I don't know how familiar you are with Catlin, but he also wrote a book called Shut your Mouth and Save Your Life. It is still in print - should you be interested. It can be found on Amazon.com. Catlin was quite a fascinating character.
Posted by Shelly Viescas on October 14,2010 | 11:39 AM
I am extremely interested in finding a map in which portrays George Catlin's journey out West, if anyone at all can help, please do.
Posted by Samantha on May 9,2010 | 04:09 PM
Sam did you find the painting you was looking for my email mferinga@earthlink.net Im willing to part at my age
Posted by Bart on April 23,2009 | 02:40 AM
Wow! I got a printed copy of this article in AP, and I managed to find it on the internet... It's a very useful article and being 1/4 American Indain, I find it very interesting... Keep up the good work! :)
Posted by Emma on December 1,2008 | 08:14 PM
After 10years of research,I have published a book called WHITE BUFFALO SPIRIT that writes of the eastern woodland culture in the early 1700's with 250 shawnee/lenape words with meanings used through out the story.It is co-edited by Helene Smith & Gretchen Schmitt and I got an email that asked if Pa. once had buffalo.I responded that the last roaming herd was exterminated in 1799.Would anyone want a copy of my book & could anyone tell me if the eastern woodland indians are represented at the Smithsonian?thank you,Michael Muchnock,Blairsville,Pa.
Posted by Michael Muchnock on October 5,2008 | 11:21 PM
Mr Ellis, I have in my possession a beautifully done mural size reproduction of Catlin's JOC-O-SOT. It is approximately 5' by 7' and is professionally hand painted in oil. I realize you would like an original but I happened to come across this post and thought you might be interested. you may email me at lily.hydrangea@gmail.com
Posted by Diana on September 17,2008 | 02:10 PM
i'm very interested in learning where i can find a painting done by george catlin, (origanal)a fair price offered. george catlin is a cousin of my family and i, would very much like to keep a painting of his in the family. thank you, sam ellis
Posted by sam ellis on July 16,2008 | 04:21 PM