Sha-có-pay
Sha-có-pay, whose name in the Dakota language means "The Six", was painted from life by George Catlin. 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 by the artist during a trip to Fort Union in 1832.[1]
Catlin had this to say about him:
"The chief of that part of the Ojibbeway tribe who inhabit these northern regions … is a man of huge size; with dignity of manner, and pride and vanity, just about in proportion to his bulk. He sat for his portrait in a most beautiful dress, fringed with scalp locks in profusion; which he had snatched, in his early life from his enemies' heads, and now wears as proud trophies and proofs of what his arm has accomplished in battles with his enemies. His shirt of buckskin is beautifully embroidered and painted in curious hieroglyphics, the history of his battles and charts of his life."[2]
References
- ↑ Peers, Laura Lynn, The Ojibwa of Western Canada, 1780 to 1870. University of Manitoba. 1994.
- ↑ Catlin, George, Letters and Notes, vol. 1, p. 58, pl. 35. Harvard College Library. 1941.
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