Oscar Howe
(1915-1983)
Oscar Howe was a Yanktonai Sioux Indian, born on the Crow Creek Reservation in South Dakota
in 1915. Howe attended the Prierre Indian School until he reached 18-years of age. Then he went
to the Santa Fe Indian School to finish his high-school career. While in high-school, Howe was
already doing exceptional work following the studio style of art. He had exhibits state wide from
New York City to San Francisco and abroad in London and in Paris.
Oscar Howe spent a few years teaching art, at the same school he had attended during his
childhood, before he enlisted into the United States Armed Forces. During World War II he was
stationed in Europe for four years. In Europe is were Howe experienced a new style of art that
later became a major influence in his work.
After OscarHowe returned to the United States, with his new bride, he taught art while working
towards his undergraduate degree at the Dakota Wesleyan University. Howe earned a Master of
Fine Arts degree from the University of Oklahoma in 1954.
There, Howe began to develop his personal style which included cubism mixed with Sioux
influences. In 1957, at age 43, OscarHowe was appointed Assistant Professor of Fine Arts at the
State University of South Dakota. During the same year he also held his first one-man
retrospective in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Oscar Howe's style of painting, in the later years, was marked as New Indian Painting. Howe was
and is considered a pioneer of this new form as it began its rise in the 1950's. Native American
artists moved beyond the Traditional Indian Paintings and began to develop a style using modern
characteristics such as Cubism and Abstract Expressionism. This is easy to see in Oscar Howe's
Horses, 1963.
Their are several factors that caused the shift from Traditional Indian Painting to New Indian
Painting. One of these factors was the World Wars in which Indian soldiers had the largest
number of enlistments. When their duty was up and the Indian soldiers returned home ceremonies
to purify them were held to welcome them back. Also, as in the case with Oscar Howe, Native
American artists in the 1950's were for more widely exposed to the national and international art
scene than the artist that came before them had been.
Oscar Howe, I found to be a lot like Robert Henri although they used different styles Howe and
Henri both painted what they knew. All of Oscar Howe's paintings I have seen thus far have dealt
with the Indian culture. One example would be his painting Ghost Dance , 1960. This painting, I
believe to abstract expressionism, it is a water color painting where the dancing figures are
distorted yet you can make out some of the feet and heads. The Ghost Dance refers to the Ghost
Dance Movement in which ritual dances were performed to bring back dead loved ones and make
them invulnerable to bullets. The United States government ordered a ban on Ghost Dancing
afraid of large gatherings of Indians. The Lakota Sioux, in violation of the ban, held a Ghost
Dance. The government sent troops to stop the dance and ended up opening fire on the Lakota
Sioux with automatic weapons. The death toll was over 200 men, women and children.
Oscar Howe has earned many awards from 1947 to his death in 1983. He has many private
collections as well art in museums and galleries all across the country side such as the Gallup Art
Gallery in Gallup, New Mexico; Denver Art Museum in Denver, Colorado; and the U.S.
Department of the Interior in Washington, D.C. Howe's Murals decorate several public buildings
including the Corn Palace in Mitchell, South Dakota. Also, located at the Joslyn Art Museum in
Omaha, Nebraska is a permanent collection.
I have always enjoyed art and I have always felt I had a good eye for art. In the past I have found
myself seeing modern art such as Cubism, Abstract and Abstract Expressionism as bad art. It
seemed to easy to do. How hard could it be to distort faces or throw paint on the wall? Now,
after taking this class and looking at different artist and art pieces including OscarHowe I look at
art through a different perspective. Hearing and seeing what drove some of these artist to create
what they did helped me to see what the message was the artist was trying to get across. Where
once there was simply distorted figures, their is now pain and suffering trying to keep a way of life
alive.
I wish I knew the story behind all of Oscar Howe's paintings. I believe I could learn more about
the Native American culture through his paintings than I could through any history book. His
paintings not only bring across factual information but they also create a environment in which the
viewer can feel, something I think all good artist need to be able to do.
Oscar Howe was not only an exceptional artist, he was also a successful teacher. It was primarily
through his efforts that it became acceptable for Native American artists to break away from
Traditional Indian style's to other artistic styles such as New Indian Painting. Howe's goal was to
express truths through his paintings that were once deeply personal to him and his people. In
1969, he wrote, What I hope to accomplish in my painting is satisfaction in content and form with
completeness and clarity of expression, and to objectify the ³truths² in Dakota culture and present
them in an artistic way.² Through looking through his work, I like many other people felt he
accomplished this with great success.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Legacy of the West, 1982. Josyln Art Museum/Center for Western Studies. 65/66.
Native American Fine Art Movement: New Indian Painting; 03/10/97;
http://www.heard.org/EDU/NAFAMRG/rsrcch7.htm
The OscarHowe Collection; 03/10/97; http://www.sdstate.edu/~wsam/http/oscar.html