Edward Hicks | National Gallery of Art https://www.nga.gov/artists/1396-edward-hicks
Discover works by Edward Hicks and learn about the artist
canvas · Accession ID 1980.62.12 Artwork Edward Hicks, Penn’s Treaty with the Indians
Discover works by Edward Hicks and learn about the artist
canvas · Accession ID 1980.62.12 Artwork Edward Hicks, Penn’s Treaty with the Indians
Gallery Explore Selected Works Artwork James Luna, Take a Picture with a Real Indian
When you think about the US West, what images and stories come to mind?
Why do you think he included groups of American Indians on horseback?
George Morrison (Grand Portage Band of Chippewa, 1919–2000) is perhaps best known for his brilliantly colored paintings of the late 1950s and 1960s, and his wood collages begun in the mid-1960s. The National Gallery of Art has acquired Morrison’s Untitled (1961), expanding its significant collection of abstract expressionist works by adding this key voice, and the first work by a Native American, to its New York School holdings.
He spoke his Native language until age nine, when he attended the Hayward Indian
Discover works by Elizabeth Moutal and learn about the artist
paper · Accession ID 1943.8.16351 Artwork Elizabeth Moutal, Figurehead from "Indian
Artwork Fritz Scholder, Tamarind Institute, Lorillard Company, Bicentennial Indian
Discover works by Doris Simmelink and learn about the artist
1998.40.287 Artwork Alex Katz, Doris Simmelink, Crown Point Press, Reclining Figure, Indian
Hostilities between North American colonists and Britain were boiling over in the 1770s when Benjamin West painted this double portrait. The British wanted to ensure the loyalty of the Mohawk people, the easternmost tribe of the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois Confederacy), in case of war.
"Joseph Brant – The Most Painted Indian."
Artwork Fritz Scholder, Tamarind Institute, Lorillard Company, Bicentennial Indian
Discover works by David Vestal and learn about the artist
silver print · Accession ID 2018.140.15 Artwork David Vestal, Pimas, Gila River Indian