 |
| October
2004 |
 |
Vol.
23 No. 8 |
| A
publication of the International Sculpture Center |
St.
Louis
Art of the Osage
St. Louis Art Museum
byJan
Garden Castro
<Back to Contents page>
 |
|
Peyote
Kit, Mid-20th century, Wood, brass locks and handle, cloth lining,
and assorted objects inside, 8 7/8 x 21 1/8 x 7 3/4 in. Gilcrease
Museum, Tulsa, Oklahoma
|
Unlike
some American Indian exhibitions, Art of the Osage offers
100 objects whose aesthetic is spare and cohesive. The arts visual
impact is unified by its elemental materials and highly charged symbols,
yet each makers individuality is strong. Since these works are unsigned,
they are treated as ethnographic rather than art objects,
yet each is a unique piece rather than a multiple turned out by a workshop.
The
Osage, descendants of earlier Mississippian cultures (10001500 CE),
were the first Americans to use their prowess as fur traders to acquire
guns, metal tools, and horses from the French and to dominate other tribes
west of the confluence of the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers around 1775.
Even after the United States forced them west into Kansas and then Oklahoma,
where oil was found on their reservation in 1897, they managed to preserve
their wealth and heritage during the Great Depression and into this century
as the Osage Nation. The exhibition organizes the works, which date from
about 1850 to the mid-20th-century, into Old Era and New Era child rearing,
hunting, domestic industry, warfare, weddings, and religion.
 |
|
Roach
Spreader. Bone, 6 5/16 x 2 3/8 x 3/8
in. National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution
|
The
Osage powerfully merge aesthetics, religion, and practical use. Four works
will serve to give an idea of the style. The first is Catalogue No. 3
(Brooklyn Museum), one of four Split-Horn Headdresses used in ritual preparations
for the hunt. No. 3 came from Shunkahmolah, a leader of the Black Bear
clan priesthood. A geometric front headband with a triangle motif leads
to the split horns, which have blond roots and dark tips amid a dramatic
triangular mane of red, ochre, tan, and white hair, feathers, horn, hide,
glass beads, fur, silk, wool, cotton, and sinew. Its centerpiece is a
kingfisher bird attached to the back. This bird, which comes from the
sky and hunts in the water, symbolically unites the Osage Sky and Earth
people. Trailing below the kingfisher, the feathers of the northern-harrier
and red-tailed hawk, sewn onto a blood-red cloth, also presage good hunting.
One object dense with symbolic shapes and meanings is a Roach Spreader
(National Museum of the American Indian) made from elk antler. The warriors
Mohawk top hair was set through holes in the bone, whose heart
shapes held the hair tight and allowed an eagle feather to be strongly
attached. This roach spreader has a bleeding heart shape and other cut
and incised designs. For the Osage, these forms help realize the order
and balance of the cosmos as embodied in their ceremonies and lives.
The Peyote medicine kit (Gilcrease Museum) is a portable shrine from the
mid-20th century. In the exhibition catalogue, Daniel C. Swan details
how the Peyote ceremony came to the Osage. Peyote religion, combining
certain Christian and Native American elements, was adopted in response
to structural change in the community due to disruptions and dislocations
around 1900. The Osage tried and rejected several different new
ways in those years of crisis, but when John Wilson, a non-Osage
Native American, introduced the Big Moon and Little
Moon ceremonies used by the Kiowa and Comanche, many Osages found
it a strong and helpful way of affirming their relation to the Creator
and strengthening their social fabric. An Osage who became a Road
Man leading ceremonies would own a grip containing rattles,
fans, liturgical instruments, and official papers authorizing the use
of peyote. This kit is notable for its colorful ceremonial objects, including
an array of sacred feathers, crosses, beaded objects, bead needles, a
comb, American bonds, family pictures, and images of Jesus and Mary.
The childs blanket from about 1850 (Osage Tribal Museum, Pawhuska,
Oklahoma) was made for the grandson of Nopawalla, Chief of the Little
Osage. A relative of Nopawalla, poet and Rhodes Scholar Carter Revard
pointed out some aspects of the blanket not noted in the catalogue and
also gave the correct spelling of the chiefs name. He noted that
Western beads and materials used in and on this blanket replace older
Osage forms: a buffalo robe, various shells that came by trade from the
Pacific or the Gulf of Mexico, abalone shell gorgets, and other wearables
dense with symbolic meaning, intended to strengthen the child in its journey
through life. At the same time, the use of new European materials to carry
the older ceremonial meanings allowed the Osage to preserve their cultural
heritage. Revard noted that the beadwork patterns embody traditional Osage
figures and symbols. At the blankets center, within a beaded circle,
is a man whose outstretched hands turn into trees. Outside the circle,
are two flags that at first seem to be stars and stripes,
but each flag has only one star, and Osages say one of these
is the Morning Star (with five points), the other is the Evening Star
(with six points). So the grandsons Symbolic Man, within the circle
of life, is set between Dawn and Sunset. Other auspicious symbols include
a horse with its feedbag (prosperity), fruit-bringing and healing flowers
and plants, and a cedar tree (everlasting life) with a golden bird perched
on top.
Each of the 100 selected objects stands out, including the patriotic beaded
blankets with waving American flags started by the War Mothers Society
around World War I. The excellent catalogue features essays by anthropologist
Garrick Bailey, Daniel C. Swan, curator John W. Nunley, and Osage leader
E. Sean StandingBear. At a ceremony inaugurating the exhibition, an Osage
orange sapling was planted inside the decayed trunk of a red oak. An elder
prayed and chanted in Osage and English; then a circle of Osage men began
drumming and chanting to complete the ceremony. The museum and all of
the objects were blessed before the installation.
<Back
to Contents page>
Sculpture Magazine Archives
To advertise in Sculpture magazine, call 718.812.8826 or e-mail advertising@sculpture.org.
To contact the editor please email editor@sculpture.org
|