George Catlin

From Free net encyclopedia

(Difference between revisions)
Revision as of 13:55, 24 February 2006
Ligulembot (Talk | contribs)
migrate {{[[template:book reference|book reference]]}} to {{[[template:cite book|cite book]]}} using [[Wikipedia:AutoWikiBrowser|AWB]]
Next diff →

Current revision

George Catlin (1796 in Wilkes-Barre, PennsylvaniaDecember_23, 1872 in Jersey City, New Jersey) was an American painter who specialized in portraits of Native Americans in the Old West. He was the fifth of 14 children. Both his mother and grandmother had been captives of Indians.

Catlin left a law career to paint Native Americans and "to rescue from oblivion their primitive looks and customs." He taught himself painting and painted indians he met in St. Louis or on excursions into indian country. He also documented his paintings with notes on customs of the approximate 48 tribes he contacted.

Catlin formed some of the earliest Wild West Shows in order to highlight the plight of the Native Americans and show their culture. He travelled the United States east coast and Europe with his shows, showing more than 500 paintings. Bankrupt by 1852, he sold his works to a private collector, Joseph Harrison, whose heirs later donated them to the Smithsonian. After the bankruptcy, Catlin travelled widely in the American West and in South America.

His works are the only known portrayals of some western tribes, including the bulk of those of the Mandan tribe, which he believed was descended from the Welsh.

Image:George Catlin 001.jpg

Contents

Family

Many historians and descendants believe Geroge Catlin had two families; his proper family on the east coast of the United States, but also a family farther west, started with a Native American woman.

Legacy

Larry McMurtry includes Catlin as a character in his The Berrybender Narratives series of novels.

Sources

External links

fr:George Catlin ru:Кетлин, Джордж