48100

Sioux American Flag War Shirt

Currency:USD Category:Art Start Price:11,250.00 USD Estimated At:45,000.00 - 65,000.00 USD
Sioux American Flag War Shirt
<B>Sioux Warrior's Shirt depicting American flags</B></I><BR>Circa 1890<BR>Length 38 1/2 in.<BR><BR>This shirt is tailored in typical Plains fashion and made to be worn poncho style. There are hide tie laces along the open sides and the sleeves are sewn together from wrist to elbow. The shirt is decorated with beaded shoulder and sleeve strips, the outer edges fringed with long hair locks. "In theory, at least, a lock of hair was added for each recognized deed in war: as, coup, capturing a horse, taking prisoners, getting wounds, saving the life of a friend, etc., but eventually the fringed shirt became simply the conventional regalia of the four grand councilors and finally a style of dress for anyone." The beaded strips feature classic Sioux colors and geometric motifs including crosses, chevrons, and triangles in red, green, yellow, and blue. Matched pairs of American flags are integrated into the design scheme. Further, the shirt is painted in blue green and yellow.<BR>The American flag became a popular design element with the Western Sioux during the last quarter of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth. Its significance is subject to differing interpretations and meanings might be layered. The flag could be viewed as a power symbol, a protective device, or an expression of loyalty to new authority. It may also be a reflection of Sioux beadworkers interest in new design concepts and changing fashions of the times. This phenomenon has been explored in several studies. (See: Pohrt, Richard, <I>The American Indian/The American Flag,</B></I> Flint Institute of Arts, 1975; and Herbst, Toby and Kopp, Joel, <I>The Flag in American Indian Art.</B></I> Cooperstown: New York State Historical Association, 1993.) For similar examples see: <I>The American Indian/The American Flag,</B></I> figure 93, p. 82; and again in <I>Art of the North American Indians: The Thaw Collection,</B></I> figure T72, p. 131. Anothe <BR><BR><B>Important notice:<