Artwork Details
- Title
- The Voice of the Great Spirit
- Artist
- Date
- 1906
- Location
- Dimensions
- 40 x 30 in. (101.6 x 76.3 cm.)
- Credit Line
- Bequest of Victor Justice Evans
- Mediums
- Mediums Description
- oil on canvas
- Classifications
- Subjects
- Ceremony — Indian
- Ceremony — funeral
- Figure — full length
- Indian
- Landscape — mountain
- Object Number
- 1985.66.362,162
Artwork Description
In the early twentieth century, Joseph Henry Sharp established a permanent fall and winter home at the Crow Agency in Montana. With the help of the Crow Indian agent, Samuel Guilford Reynolds, he built a log cabin on the reservation, where he made many paintings of the people and their rituals. This image shows a platform burial for a Crow chief, who lies shrouded in his teepee and surrounded by the personal possessions that will accompany him to the spirit world. Medicines hang above the body to ward off evil spirits, and the heads and tails of the chief’s two favorite horses are tied to the platform’s four supporting poles. Sharp struggled to find a horse’s head to paint, and was discussing the problem in the local store one winter’s evening when an old mountain man overheard the conversation and told them about a dead horse he had found in a nearby ditch. The grieving widow in the painting is a Native American woman named Julia Sun Goes Slow, who reluctantly agreed to pose for the artist. (Fenn, The Beat of the Drum and the Whoop of the Dance, 1983)