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Ledger Art



 
 
Ledger Art is a term for Plains Indian
Plains Indians

The Plains Indians are the Indigenous peoples of the Americas who live on the plains and rolling hills of the Great Plains....
 narrative drawing or painting on paper, primarily from the mid-19th century to the 1930s, but also continuing into the present. The term comes from the accounting ledger
Ledger

A ledger or lieger , is the principal book for recording transactions. Originally, the term referred to a large volume of Scripture/service book kept in one place in church and accessible....
 books that were a common source for paper for Plains Indians during the late 19th century.

er art evolved from hide painting. Among Plains tribes, women would paint abstract, geometrical designs; whereas, men would paint representational
Representation (arts)

Representation describes the signs that stand in for and take the place of something else. It is through representation people know and understand the world and reality through the act of naming it....
 designs.






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Encyclopedia


Ledger Art is a term for Plains Indian
Plains Indians

The Plains Indians are the Indigenous peoples of the Americas who live on the plains and rolling hills of the Great Plains....
 narrative drawing or painting on paper, primarily from the mid-19th century to the 1930s, but also continuing into the present. The term comes from the accounting ledger
Ledger

A ledger or lieger , is the principal book for recording transactions. Originally, the term referred to a large volume of Scripture/service book kept in one place in church and accessible....
 books that were a common source for paper for Plains Indians during the late 19th century.

Historical Precedents

Ledger art evolved from hide painting. Among Plains tribes, women would paint abstract, geometrical designs; whereas, men would paint representational
Representation (arts)

Representation describes the signs that stand in for and take the place of something else. It is through representation people know and understand the world and reality through the act of naming it....
 designs. The men's designs were often heraldic devises or visions painted on shields, tipis
Tipi

A tipi is a conical tent originally made of animal skins or birch bark and popularized by the Native Americans in the United States of the Great Plains....
, shirts, leggings, or robes. They often painted feats in battle or hunting. Plains pictorial art emphasizes narrative action and eliminates unnecessary detail or backgrounds. Figures tended to be drawn in hard outlines and filled with solid fields of color.

These were all traditionally painted on animal hides – particularly buffalo
American Bison

The American Bison is a bovinae mammal, also commonly known as the American buffalo. "Buffalo" is somewhat of a misnomer for this animal, as it is only distantly related to either of the two "true buffaloes", the Wild Asian Water Buffalo and the African buffalo....
 hides. When buffalo became scarce after eradication programs encouraged by the US Federal government, Plains artists began painting and drawing on paper.

New Materials

An increasing supply of ledger books and other paper came from traders, government agents, missionaries, and military officers. With these came pencils, ink fountain pens, crayons, and watercolor paints. These new tools allowed for greater detail and experimentation than the earlier tools, such as bone or wood styli dipped in mineral pigments, had. The compact ledger books and pencils were highly portable, making them ideal for nomadic lifestyles.

Fort Marion

The most celebrated ledger artists were prisoners of war at Fort Marion
Castillo de San Marcos

The 'Castillo de San Marcos' is a Spanish built fort located in the city of St. Augustine, Florida, Florida, United States. It was known as Fort Marion from 1821 until 1942, and Fort St....
 in St. Augustine, Florida. In 1874, in what became known as the Red River War
Red River War

The Red River War was a military campaign launched by the U.S. Army in 1874 to remove the Comanche, Kiowa, Southern Cheyenne, and Arapaho Indian tribes from the Southern Plains and enforce their relocation to reservations in Indian Territory....
 or Buffalo War, a group of Cheyenne
Cheyenne

Cheyenne are a native Americans in the United States nation of the Great Plains. The Cheyenne Nation is composed of two united Indian tribe, the S?'taa'e and the Ts?-ts?h?st?hese , which translates to "those like us"....
, Kiowa
Kiowa

The Kiowa are a nation of American Indians in the United States who migrated from what is now Canada to their present location in Southwestern Oklahoma....
, Comanche
Comanche

The Comanche are a Native Americans in the United States ethnic group whose range consisted of present-day eastern New Mexico, southern Colorado, southern Kansas, all of Oklahoma, and most of northwest Texas....
, Arapaho
Arapaho

The Arapaho are a tribe of Native Americans in the United States historically living on the eastern Great Plains of Colorado and Wyoming. They were close allies of the Cheyenne tribe and loosely aligned with the Sioux....
, and Caddo
Caddo

The Caddo Nation is a confederacy of several Southeastern tribes Native Americans in the United States tribes, who, in the 16th century, inhabited much of what is now East Texas, western Louisiana and portions of southern Arkansas and Oklahoma....
 warriors fought the US Army to protect the last free herd of buffalo and to assert their autonomy. In the harsh winter of 1874-1875, many tribal camps were forced to surrender to various Indian agencies, and the supposed leaders of the Red River War were rounded up and sent to Fort Marion. From 1875 to 1878, the 71 men and one woman were under the command of Richard Henry Pratt
Richard Henry Pratt

Richard Henry Pratt is best known as the founder and longtime superintendent of the influential Carlisle Indian Industrial School at Carlisle, Pennsylvania, where he profoundly shaped Indian education and federal Indian policy at the turn of the twentieth century....
, who used the opportunity to expose the Indians to Western education. He provided the prisoners with basic art supplies such as pencils, ink, crayons, watercolor paint, and paper.

26 of the Fort Marion prisoner actively engaged in drawing. They were younger Cheyenne, Arapaho, and Kiowa men. Some of the most prolific and well-known artists include Paul Caryl Zotom (Kiowa), David Pendleton Oakerhater
David Pendleton Oakerhater

David Pendleton Oakerhater also known as O-kuh-ha-tuh and Making Medicine. He was a Cheyenne Native Americans in the United States warrior and spiritual leader, who became an artist and Episcopal deacon....
 or Making Medicine (Cheyenne), Tichtematse or Squint Eyes (Cheyenne), Wohaw (Kiowa), Howling Wolf (Cheyenne), Etahdleuh Doanmoe (Kiowa), White Bear
White Bear

The name White Bear might refer to:* Polar Bear - also known as a White Bear.* The Spirit bear - an endangered subspecies of American black bears in coastal British Columbia....
 (Arapaho), Koba
Koba

Koba can refer to:* Koba, from the 1883 novel The Patricide by Alexander Kazbegi* Joseph Stalin, a pseudonym after Kazbegi's characher...
 (Kiowa), and Bear’s Heart (Cheyenne). Tichtematse, Howling Wolf, White Bear, and Koba all continued drawing after their release from prison.

Subject Matter


Battle exploits dominated ledger art. Other traditional themes such as hunting, courtship, and religious practices were common subjects. Ledger artists also documented their rapidly changing environmental – portraying encroaching European-Americans and new technologies such as trains and cameras. Many ledger artists worked with ethnologists, by documenting shield and tipi designs, ethnobotanical information, winter counts
Winter count

Winter counts are pictorial calendars or histories in which tribal records and events were recorded. The Blackfeet, Mandan, Kiowa, Lakota, and other Plains Indians used winter counts extensively....
, dance customs and regalia, and other cultural information. Dreams and visions inspired ledger art just as they had inspired earlier hide paintings.

The Fine Art World

Missionaries, anthropologists, and tourists eagerly collected ledger books in the late 19th century. Arapaho artist Carl Sweezy (1881-1953) and Kiowa artist Silver Horn (1860-1940) established professional careers as ledger artists. These artists inspired the Kiowa Five
Kiowa Five

The Kiowa Five were James Auchiah , Spencer Asah , Jack Hokeah , Stephen Mopope , and Monroe Tsatoke , five young Kiowa men who received art education at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Oklahoma, during the late 1920s....
, or, as they are increasingly known, the Kiowa Six, who painted with more sophisticated materials and met with international success when they exhibited their work in the 1928 International Art Congress in Prague
Prague

Prague is the Capital and World's largest cities of the Czech Republic. Its official name is Hlavn? mesto Praha, meaning Prague, the Capital City....
, Czechoslovakia.

Today

Numerous contemporary Plains artists create ledger paintings today. Many seek out 19th century documents on which to paint, creating ironic juxtapositions between the printed text and the paintings. Dwayne Wilcox (Oglala Lakota
Oglala Lakota

File:Ryan Wilson NIEA.jpgThe Oglala Lakota or Oglala Sioux, , meaning "to scatter one's own" in Lakota language, live in the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota bordering Nebraska and 50 miles east of Wyoming, the second-largest Indian reservation in the United States....
) uses the style of 19th Lakota painters to express humorous views of contemporary realities for Lakota people. Arthur Amiotte (Oglala Lakota) builds upon the collage aspect of ledger art and combines text, photography, naturalistic painting and stylized Plains pictorial art in his work.