The Little Crow

Method Lithograph with hand colouring
Artist after James Otto Lewis
Published Philadelphia Published Jany. 1836. Lithograph'd by Lehman and Duval No.7 Bank Alley Philadelphia.
Dimensions Image 220 x 190 mm, Sheet 338 x 210 mm
Notes A half length portrait of celebrated Sioux Chief The Little Crow from James Otto Lewis' important work The aboriginal port folio: or, a collection of portraits of the most celebrated chiefs of the North American Indians published in 1836. The portrait shows Little Crow sat facing forward looking at the viewer. He wears a feathered head-dress coloured red and white and a plain tunic and shawl draped over his arms. This portrait was taken by Lewis at the Treaty of Prairie du Chien in 1825, a series of peace treaties that were made and signed in Prairie du Chien, now in modern day Wisconsin, between the United States and representatives from the Sioux, Sac and Fox, Menominee, Iowa, Ho-Chunk and the Anishinaabeg (Ojibwe, Odawa and Potawatomi) Native American peoples.

The aboriginal port folio: or, a collection of portraits of the most celebrated chiefs of the North American Indians published in parts between 1835-36 is the first printed publication on American Indians originally issued monthly with 8 plates in each instalment. The issues were not popular however, and the publishers ran in to financial difficulties before completing the series. Because of this the series is incredibly rare and rarely seen complete. The drawings and original paintings were done by Lewis during the series of treaty meetings in the Upper Great Lakes region during the 1820's. Lewis was employed and commissioned for fifteen years by the Federal Government as a working artist, working primarily in Wisconsin and Indiana, where he painted portraits and scenes some of which appeared in the Aboriginal Portfolio. All of the original drawings created by James Otto Lewis were destroyed in a Smithsonian fire in 1865.

James Otto Lewis (1799 – 1858) was an American engraver and painter who was noted for his portraiture of Native Americans. Born in Philadelphia Lewis started working with the Federal Government in 1819 as a travelling artist painting official portraits of Native Americans in an effort to preserve a record of their peoples and what was believed to be a vanishing culture during a tumultuous time. He is most known for the important work The aboriginal port folio: or, a collection of portraits of the most celebrated chiefs of the North American Indians published in 1836.

Condition: Trimmed. Some toning to sheet edges and over publication line.
Framing unmounted
Price £300.00
Stock ID 52961

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