Original Ledger Drawing from the Black Hawk Ledgers [SOLD]
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- Category: Drawings
- Origin: Sioux
- Medium: colored pencil, paper
- Size: 7” x 11-1/2” image: 14-7/8” x 19-1/2” framed
- Item # C3432B SOLD
Black Hawk was a member of the Sans Arc Lakota tribe, a nomadic tribe that followed the buffalo that they depended on for food, clothing and other necessities. By the end of the 19th century, herds had been hunted almost to extinction by settlers. Black Hawk was hard-pressed to feed his family during this time. To help him overcome this dilemma, William Edward Caton, the Indian trader at the Cheyenne Agency in Dakota, hired him to document his tribe’s history in ledger form. He paid him 50 cents for each page. Caton gave him sheets of lined writing paper, colored pencil, and a pen. Black Hawk produced seventy six drawings over the course of the winter of 1880-1881. It is not clear if these were in a ledger book or on individual sheets of paper.
This drawing attributed to Black Hawk appears to have been torn out of a book because of the irregular edge of the paper on the top of the drawing.
There is little known about Black Hawk after he produced these ledger drawings. He is no longer listed in the Cheyenne River Agency records after 1889. It is speculated that he was killed at Wounded Knee in the newly formed state of South Dakota in December of 1890.
The drawing is floated on fabric material so that the full page is visible. It is framed in a hand-made wood gold leaf frame by Perspectives Fine Art Framing, Santa Fe.
Condition: very good condition
Provenance:: originally from the personal collection of Joe Rivera, at the time Director of Morning Star Gallery, Santa Fe. He sold it to the previous owner in 1994 or 1995 who then gifted it to his sister in Santa Fe from whom we acquired it.
- Category: Drawings
- Origin: Sioux
- Medium: colored pencil, paper
- Size: 7” x 11-1/2” image: 14-7/8” x 19-1/2” framed
- Item # C3432B SOLD