Charlie Russell Reflected Native Americans

Decent Essays
In my opinion, I think Charlie Russell always reflected Native Americans as bad people in his artwork. In most of his paintings that had Native Americans as one of the characters, he would refer to them in a bad way and call them names. In other paintings where there was women in them he would only paint them in the teepee cooking, cleaning, or taking care of a child, never anything else. In the paintings that had men in them he would only show them hunting, doing nothing, or them in a battle.

There is a painting where Charlie Russell refers to Native Americans as “land hogs” and says they only want them to be on their land and if anyone else walks onto their land they call it trespassing. I don’t think of Native Americans as land hogs, I

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    There’s a saying that questions “do the ends justify the means”? This means does the outcome outweigh everything sacrificed to get there. In the early to mid nineteenth century, America was hurt socially, technologically, economically, and politically due to the Trail of Tears, President Andrew Jackson, and Industrialization. Beginning in the late 1700’s and advancing into the 1800’s, the Native Americans that had lived in America for the past 12,000 years gradually lost the majority of their land.…

    • 375 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Charles Russell and Frederic Remington were artists well-known for their depiction of the Old West. Using posters, oil on canvas, and bronze as mediums, they provide an extensive journey from 1888 to 1909 revealing the atmosphere in association with the West. The expansion West provided an opportunity for the United States to not only grow as a nation, but to explore new territories for resources, land, and settlement. In relation, the closing of the frontier in 1890 signified the result of development, which brought Indians and Americans closer together. Sharing the land would prove difficult and create tensions as seen in some of the illustrations, despite the last Indian wars ending about a decade prior.…

    • 1220 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    He called them offensive names like Indians and heathens that were hostile and savage, and he devalued them, saying that “the assumption remained that a single Englishman was worth at least ten Indians in battle” (Philbrick 241). Even describing war, his bias shown through, calling a day when the Pilgrims kill Native Americans as “a remarkable day” (Philbrick 250), but calling the reversal “a day of horror and death” (Philbrick 238). The Native Americans are not only presented negatively by Philbrick’s words, but by the quotes he showcases. The only depictions of Native Americans are through Pilgrim observation, leaving no room for the Native Americans to tell their story, even in a history that…

    • 1038 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    What issues and events led to the mass removal of Native Americans in the 1840s? What role did Andrew Jackson play in the Trail of Tears? What does his response to the removal reveal about Jackson’s vision of democracy? Early 1830s, hundreds of Native Americans lived on acres of land in Georgia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Alabama.…

    • 739 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Decent Essays

    “Russell Means” Native American, Russell Means, was born on November 10, 1939. He is described during his life as ‘the most famous American Indian of the 20th century”. Even in the 20th century he would represent his culture by dressing in resemblances of his ancestors. Russell was an activist and a member Sioux tribe, known for leading many battles between the U.S. and the Native Indians. Later he became an actor, acting in such films as “The Last of the Mohicans”.…

    • 173 Words
    • 1 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Native Americans have had an estimated 1.5 billion acres of land taken from them by the United States (The Invasion of America). Nearly every tribe’s land has been greatly reduced by white settlers, whether by forceful removal or sneaky laws and enactments. Losing so much land can be devastating to a nation. The location of a nation can determine the natural resources that can be used, the size and population, and the territorial jurisdiction. Land not only provides economic opportunity, but is also a “hallmark of identity”, a “barometer of community integrity”, and “a repository for […] the remains of ancestors and their artifacts, the cornerstones of worldviews, and moral lessons from the past” (d).…

    • 1434 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    When European immigrants began traveling to the Americas not only did they believe it was Asia, per Columbus’s ventures, they believed the land was free to take. There was this preconceived notion of land among Europeans that land was personal property, used for economic & material needs…or wants. Lands that weren’t being actively controlled or used for things like agriculture, resource extraction, industry, or homesteads were fair game to take and anyone could use it for whatever they pleased. Their Native American counterparts, did not see land as something that could be “owned” but communally used and there were rights granted amongst themselves to which tribes could hunt, reside, and grow there. Access to the lands were closely linked…

    • 1015 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Louisiana Purchase Dbq

    • 1052 Words
    • 5 Pages

    After the successful succession of the original Thirteen Colonies from Great Britain the idea of Manifest Destiny became prevalent in America. Manifest Destiny is the American belief that they have the divine right to expand and push westward. Due to this belief, after the 19th century Americans would have acquired a vast majority of the land in the continent. However, before this could occur there would be negotiations, war, and dispute that took place throughout the 1800s-1850s. This period involved disputes including the Louisiana Purchase of 1803, conflict with other countries, The Annexation of Texas, and the settlement in Oregon.…

    • 1052 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Discussion 1 The turn of the century in 1900’s, most remaining Native Americans had been forced, to leave their ancestral lands; it was truly a time of cultural assimilation (Assimilation through Education). Some chose to live on the reservations that were created by the U.S. government starting in the 1890s, while others spent their lives hiding from whites whom they feared would kill or capture them. Native Americans world as they new it naturally died out, from progression (Assimilation through Education), they needed to become a part of white society. There Indian language, religion, and art, would become something from the past to be studied or viewed in a museum, but would not be the products of living cultures.…

    • 608 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The Cherokee Indians had lived in northwest Georgia, but in the 1800s many whites begin to settle there. Georgia believed the state had the right to this land because it was within the borders of Georgia, but the Cherokee Indians had lived there for centuries and felt they had a right to the land. Many Cherokees adapted a more American lifestyle and some became plantation owners or store owners. The Cherokee Nation also created a constitution that was similar to the Constitution of the United States. The Cherokee believed they would have a stronger right to the land by adapting American ways.…

    • 346 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Throughout history Native Americans have had problems with the American government and land. Andrew Jackson was not a big fan of letting the Indians keep land that interfered with the American expansion plan. The Natives thought that nobody could own land and were surprised it was being taken and they were moved. Although the Native Americans believed nobody could own land they seemed to be very angry when they were moved away from it. The natives claimed that land was sacred and cannot be owned by man and his ancestors.…

    • 923 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    One main focus of AIM was to protect the Native American people from police harassment. This was the when the foundation of the American Indian Movement began. The main aim of the American Indian Movement was to bring attention to the discriminations against Native Americans. The members of the American Indian movement wanted to change the perception of Native American people. If more attention was brought to Native Americans, such as media then that offered a piece of protection to those Native Americans.…

    • 807 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    In the Native American society, personal goods such as tools were considered yours only if you created them yourself. Even if something was owned it was considered readily replaceable. Despite their easy nature of personal goods, land was different. The land which crops were grown and the area their wigwams stood on were, in their minds, possessed by them in spite of the fact that they moved every couple of months to a new area. They also believed that their main hunting and gathering lands were theirs to claim.…

    • 1758 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In “Dear John Wayne” by Louise Erdrich, it becomes obvious to the reader that Erdrich feels as if Native Americans, such as herself, are inferior to the entire white population. Throughout her poem, Erdrich expresses her opinions and the actions of white people like “John Wayne.” The message she sends to the reader brings attention to the display of Native Americans. Erdrich strives to express her opinion that the media displays Native Americans in an insignificant fashion and that the media believes their worth is inconspicuous. First of all, Erdrich’s use of John Wayne indicates additional information than just the importance of his movies and the drive-in.…

    • 765 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Both articles, Julie Schimmel’s Inventing the Indian and Leonard Bell’s Artist and Empire: Victorian Representation of Subject People, delve into the topic of native people and their representation and misrepresentation in artwork. Bell’s writing dives a bit deeper in my opinion in terms of his historical analysis than Julie Schimmel’s. Schimmel’s writing comes from the viewpoint that leans more toward the side of art history rather than historical and tends to brush over the historical relationship between the whites and the Indians. I should note that she does go into enough detail so that a reader with no prior knowledge of the already strained relationship between the Native Americans and the White Americans would be able to understand…

    • 1202 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays