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Old Indian Arrowmaker and His Daughter (work of art)

Artwork Info

Created
modeled 1866, carved 1867
Artist
Edmonia Lewis
Nationality
American
Birth/Death
1844-1907
Dimensions
21 1/4 × 14 × 13 1/2 inches (54 × 35.6 × 34.3 centimeters)
Medium
Marble, Sculpture

Credit

Gift of Marilyn Jacobs Preyer

Object Number
2022.6
Culture
American
Classification
Sculpture
Department
American to 1910

Key Ideas

  • Edmonia Lewis often represented her Black and Native American heritage in her sculptures. She gained international recognition at a time in history when women artists and artists of color had fewer opportunities than their white male counterparts.
  • This sculpture depicts a scene from an epic poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow.
  • The woman depicted in this sculpture is a Dakota woman named Minnehaha, and the man is her father. Minnehaha is shown plaiting, or braiding, mats while her father carves arrowheads. The deer lying at their feet was a gift from the Ojibwa chief Hiawatha. 

Learn More

Edmonia Lewis was an American sculptor of Black and Native American (Anishinaabe/Ojibwa) heritage. Her subjects often related to her multiracial identity. She explored the abolition of slavery, Black emancipation, and Native American stories in her work.

Lewis spent most of her career living in Rome, where she had more opportunities to succeed as a woman artist of color. In America she relied on abolitionist patronage, but in Italy she gained international recognition as an artist. Lewis was Catholic, and living in Italy allowed her to practice her religion more freely. In Italy she also received professional support from Charlotte Cushman, an important figure for expatriate sculptors in Rome, and Maria Weston Chapman, a dedicated abolitionist. 

Between 1866 and 1872, Lewis created several sculptures inspired by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow’s epic poem The Song of Hiawatha (1855). This sculpture portrays Minnehaha “plaiting mats of flags and rushes,” while her father makes “arrow-heads of jasper.” They are shown looking up as if to welcome the Ojibwa chief Hiawatha. The chief has just given Minnehaha a deer as a gift, to show his romantic interest in her. Lewis’s sculpture honors Indigenous cultures and their creative practices. It depicts two generations of Dakota artists, father and daughter, in the act of making traditional objects. The Dakota are an Indigenous people of North America and First Nations band government. They are located in Minnesota and western Wisconsin, where the Dakota have lived for generations along the region’s lakes and rivers.

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Images

  • A white marble sculpture of a father and daughter sitting. The daughter sits slightly lower than the father while she works on a weaving project. Her father is carving an arrowhead. A slaughtered deer lies at their feet.

    Old Indian Arrowmaker and His Daughter

  • A white marble sculpture of a father and daughter sitting. The daughter sits slightly lower than the father while she works on a weaving project. Her father is carving an arrowhead. A slaughtered deer lies at their feet.

    Old Indian Arrowmaker and His Daughter

  • A white marble sculpture of a father and daughter sitting. The daughter sits slightly lower than the father while she works on a weaving project. Her father is carving an arrowhead. A slaughtered deer lies at their feet.

    Old Indian Arrowmaker and His Daughter

  • A white marble sculpture of a father and daughter sitting. The daughter sits slightly lower than the father while she works on a weaving project. Her father is carving an arrowhead. A slaughtered deer lies at their feet.

    Old Indian Arrowmaker and His Daughter

  • A white marble sculpture of a father and daughter sitting. The daughter sits slightly lower than the father while she works on a weaving project. Her father is carving an arrowhead. A slaughtered deer lies at their feet.

    Old Indian Arrowmaker and His Daughter