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Browse: Bacone College: A Legacy of Indigenous Art in Indian Territory

One of the oldest educational institutions in Oklahoma, Bacone College—formerly known as Indian University—was founded in 1880 by Almon C. Bacone (1830–1896). Indian University was originally intended to assimilate and Christianize[1] what were called the Five Civilized Tribes: members of the Cherokee Nation, Muscogee Nation, Choctaw Nation, Seminole Nation, and Chickasaw Nation. When Bacone arrived in Indian Territory[2] in 1878, nearly three decades prior to Oklahoma’s 1907 statehood, he was there to direct the Cherokee Male Seminary. However, in 1881 Bacone received 160 acres from the Muscogee Nation—land intended as the site of Bacone’s proposed Indian University. The university changed its name to Bacone College in the early twentieth century. At that time, it was the only institution of higher learning to admit Indigenous students in the state of Oklahoma[3] until desegregation. It was also the first university to offer degrees in the arts to Indigenous students.

Many of the Indigenous artists in Gilcrease Museum’s collection were graduates of the school, or were influenced by artists who attended the school. Bacone created an art department, and the instructors drew upon Flatstyle techniques,[4] sometimes referred to as Bacone style, which in large part were deeply informed by Plains traditions and techniques for creating pictorial and figurative narrative-based artworks. During the 1920s, shortly after the rise to fame of the Kiowa Six,[5] a wave of Indigenous artmaking swept the territory. Bacone College quickly became a confluence of Indigenous cultural and artistic practice, and this would greatly impact the canon of Indigenous art.

Today, Bacone College remains a key stakeholder in the past, present, and future of Indigenous art. Some of the most well-known Bacone alumni in Gilcrease’s collection include W. Richard West (Cheyenne, Arapaho), Woodrow Wilson Crumbo (Muscogee, Citizen Band Potawatomi), Acee Blue Eagle (Muscogee, Pawnee), Alfred Momaday (Kiowa [Cáuigù]), Antowine Warrior (Sac & Fox), C. Terry Saul (Chickasaw, Choctaw), Calvin Larvie (Lower Brule Sioux Tribe), Enoch Kelly Haney (Muscogee, Seminole), Fred Beaver (Muskogee, Seminole), Joan Hill (Cherokee, Muscogee), Jerome Tiger (Muscogee, Seminole), and Marian Terasaz (Comanche).

—Jordan Poorman Cocker, Henry Luce Foundation Curatorial Scholar for Indigenous Painting Collection Research, 2022

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[1] Neuman, Indian Play, 29–30.

[2] For a contemporary map of the area, see Gray’s Atlas Map of Indian Territory (3926.744) by G.W. & C.B. Colton and Company, 1872. 

[3] Neuman, Indian Play, 3–5.

[4] Flatstyle was developed by the Kiowa Six, an early twentieth-century artist collective under the tutelage of Professor Oscar Jacobson at the University of Oklahoma. The collective birthed an Indigenous art movement known as the Kiowa Style of painting, also called Flatstyle and Oklahoma Style, which is recognized by its lack of figural shading, and backgrounds that have a shallow or indistinguishable depth of field. The Kiowa Six artists were Spencer AsahJames AuchiahJack HokeahStephen MopopeLois Smokey, and Monroe Tsatoke.

[5] You can find out more in The Kiowa Six: Painting Oral Histories.

Image Title Creator Culture Accession # Materials/Techniques
Indian Legends from Montana W. Richard West Native American; Southern Cheyenne 01.2274 oil on canvas, possibly acrylic
Indian Legends from Oklahoma W. Richard West Native American; Southern Cheyenne 01.2288 oil on canvas, possibly acrylic
Cherokees at ceremonial fire Cecil Dick Native American; Cherokee (United Keetoowah Band) 02.385 tempera on board
Shield Dancer W. Richard West Native American; Southern Cheyenne 02.1992 tempera on paper
Peyote Bird Woodrow Wilson Crumbo Native American; Citizen Potawatomi 02.505 tempera on paper
Deer Resting Woodrow Wilson Crumbo Native American; Citizen Potawatomi 13.301 ink on paper
Forty-Nine Dance Woodrow Wilson Crumbo Native American; Citizen Potawatomi 02.508 tempera on paper
Deer and Baby Woodrow Wilson Crumbo Native American; Citizen Potawatomi 13.320 ink on paper
Untitled Acee Blue Eagle, Solomon McCombs Studio Collection Native American; Muscogee (Creek), Pawnee 14.647 woodcut on paper
Warriors on Horses Acee Blue Eagle Native American; Muscogee (Creek), Pawnee 02.458 tempera on mat board
Untitled Alfred Momaday Native American; Kiowa 02.1979 tempera on paper
The Angry Buffalo Antowine Warrior Native American; Sac and Fox 01.2481 oil on canvas
Choctaw Ball Player C. Terry Saul Native American; Choctaw, Chickasaw 01.2097 casein on masonite
Buffalo Dance Calvin Larvie Native American; Sicangu Lakota 02.216 tempera on marbled paper
The Inner Spirit Enoch Kelly Haney Native American; Seminole, Muscogee (Creek) 01.2298 casein
Seminole Family Fred Beaver Native American; Muscogee (Creek), Seminole 02.566 tempera on matboard
Apache Fire Dance Dancer Fred Beaver Native American; Muscogee (Creek), Seminole 02.55 tempera on board
Florida Seminole Family Fred Beaver, Raymond and Miriam Freedman Native American; Muscogee (Creek), Seminole 02.1921 tempera on matboard
Harvest Celebration of the First Fruits Joan Hill Native American; Cherokee, Muscogee (Creek) 01.2548 acrylic on canvas
Play Ball Jerome Tiger Native American; Muscogee (Creek), Seminole 02.1960 tempera on matboard