Ohio History Journal

  • 1
  •  
  • 2
  •  
  • 3
  •  
  • 4
  •  
  • 5
  •  
  • 6
  •  

PRESENTATION OF PORTRAITS OF

PRESENTATION OF PORTRAITS OF

AMERICAN INDIANS

 

 

BY GENERAL EDWARD ORTON, JR.

 

During the spring of 1924, an exhibit of the work of

a rising young American artist, Mr. W. Langdon Kihn

of New York, was shown in this city and was found to

consist wholly of original portraits of American In-

dians, made from life in their own homes, under con-

ditions which reduced their natural embarrassment,

timidity, or superstitious fear of portraiture to a mini-

mum, thus greatly favoring truthful and natural por-

traits. Mr. Kihn's drawings were mainly made with

pencil, though some were in monochrome crayon, and

some were colored brilliantly as to the subject's costume,

and decoration. His subjects in this exhibition were

mainly of the Blackfeet Tribe, and closely associated

tribes, the Piegans, the Assiniboine Sioux, etc. He had

a dozen or so portraits of southwestern Indians from

Laguna, New Mexico, whose faces bore clear marks of

the partial infusion of some Mexican, Spanish, or other

white blood.

Other exhibitions of Mr. Kihn's work have com-

prised the results of seasons spent among other Indian

tribes, the Stoneys, the Kootenay, etc.

It appears that the methods of this young painter,

which involve his living for months at a time with the

 

* Address before the Annual Meeting of the Ohio State Archaeological

and Historical Society, October 2, 1924.

(132)