Sha-có-pay
Sha-có-pay is an oil-on-canvas painting from life by American artist George Catlin, from 1832. It depicts an indigenous American named Sha-có-pay, who was chief of the Plains Ojibwe.[1] It was painted at Fort Union. Catlin traveled throughout Western North America and painted Indians at a time when the only contact with Whites was from explorers and traders. The painting shows traditional Plains Ojibwe clothing such as a beaded buckskin shirt, a buffalo-hide robe, eagle feathers, hair pipes, and a beaded necklace that is unique to the tribes of the northernmost plains (Ojibwe and Cree). The portrait was painted during a trip to Fort Union in 1832.[2] Catlin said:
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sha-có-pay, The Six, Chief of the Plains Ojibwa by George Catlin. |
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