LONDON.- The National Portrait Gallery, London stages George Catlin: American Indian Portraits an exhibition which includes major loans from the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington many of which have not been seen in the UK since the 1840s. George Catlin (1796-1872) was an American artist, writer and showman who documented Native American peoples and their cultures to serve as a record of what he believed to be a passing way of life. What he created is regarded as one of the most important records of indigenous peoples ever made. Catlin was not the only artist to embark on such a project in the nineteenth century, but his record is the most extensive still in existence.
Catlin, who originally studied law and passed the bar, left his legal career behind in 1821 when he moved to Philadelphia. Here Catlin learnt to paint in oil from John Neagle, Rembrandt Peale and Thomas Sully. He made his first Native American Indian portrait in 1826, a sketch of Seneca chief Red Jacket. Catlin made five trips in the western part of the United States during the 1830s before the Native American peoples of those regions had been subsumed into the legal boundaries of the United States. The Indian Gallery comprised the materials and work Catlin produced, during and inspired by the five trips, which included some 500 portraits, pictures and indigenous artefacts. Catlin aimed to meet as many Indian peoples as he could and his total was around forty-eight different indigenous groups or nations by the time the Indian Gallery reached its zenith.
Catlins entrepreneurial spirit led him to tour the Indian Gallery in the eastern states from 1837-39, but he failed in selling it to the United States government. He then went on to tour the gallery in Europe for the next ten years including exhibitions held in Great Britain, France and Belgium. Always needing to make financial gains from his endeavours, Catlin used entrepreneurial methods to promote the spectacle of the Indian Gallery during its European tour, some of which may seem dubious to a 21st century audience, but at the time were not unusual. The works are displayed closely hung to evoke the sense of spectacle Catlin created during the time of his tour and by doing so demonstrate how Catlin constructed a particular image of Native Americans in the minds of his audience.
George Catlin: American Indian Portraits is organised by the National Portrait Gallery, London, in collaboration with the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington. The exhibition is curated by Dr Stephanie Pratt, Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Plymouth who has published extensively on the representation of Native American peoples, and Dr Joan Carpenter Troccoli, Founding Director of the Petrie Institute of Western American Art at the Denver Art Museum, from which she retired in 2012. She is co-author of George Catlin and His Indian Gallery (2002). The National Portrait Gallerys Peter Funnell, Curator, C19th Portraits and Head of Research Programmes also co-curated the exhibition.
Sandy Nairne, Director of the National Portrait Gallery, London, says: George Catlin made powerful and sympathetic portraits of the American Indians at a time of traumatic historical change. They are wonderful images, and I am delighted that the Smithsonian American Art Museum is collaborating with the National Portrait Gallery to allow them to be seen in Britain again.
Dr Stephanie Pratt, Associate Professor of Art History, University of Plymouth, says: As a person of Native American descent, I am very conscious of the extent to which Catlin's record of Plains Indian peoples dominates their representation even today. Visitors to the exhibition will have the opportunity to consider Catlin's Indian Gallery and ask whether these striking images adequately address the historical reality of American Indian peoples at that time.
Dr Joan Carpenter Troccoli, Founding Director of the Petrie Institute of Western American Art at the Denver Art Museum says: George Catlin: American Indian Portraits is a rare opportunity to examine a complex cultural figure from multiple perspectives. Ultimately Catlin's reputation rests on his art, and it's a thrill to see so many of his greatest works together on public view. In the presence of these portraits, it's impossible not to think of Catlin's pledge to his Native American subjects - that phoenix-like, they would rise from the stain on a painter's palette, and live again upon canvas, and stand forth for centuries yet to come, the living monuments of a noble race.
Elizabeth Glassman, President and CEO, Terra Foundation for American Art, says: We are proud to support the return of George Catlins superb collection of paintings and artefacts to the United Kingdom for the first time since 1840, when his Indian Gallery debuted at Londons Egyptian Hall. Catlins representations of Native American life excited European audiences then, and this exhibition, developed collaboratively by American and British curators, will surely inspire a robust cross-cultural dialogue thats as important today as it was more than 150 years ago.