Dancer Wearing Otter Cap / Jim Lacy Red Corn
Essay/Description
In this painting, an Osage man performs in the Straight Dance style that is prominently tied to the I’n-Lon-Schka, an Osage ceremonial dance. His Osage otter cap, adorned with an eagle feather, is reserved for men of distinction. He also wears a scarf, a cloth shirt, and a wool vest decorated with beadwork along the waist seams. There are two medicine ties on the back of his bandoliers. Around both biceps are German-silver armbands decorated with ribbons. The dancer’s black wool leggings and breechcloth feature white and blue ribbonwork along the outside seams. Two sets of bells and yellow garters are tied below his knees at the top of the calf. His Osage-cut moccasins are identifiable by their elongated side flaps. The contours and shapes of the dancer’s body and clothing are emphasized in this Flatstyle painting.
In his left hand, the dancer holds a flat fan of eagle feathers. In addition to painting, Osage artist Jim Lacy Red Corn also made fans such as these.
—Jordan Poorman Cocker, Henry Luce Foundation Curatorial Scholar for Indigenous Painting Collection Research, 2021
This text was developed from an interview with Talee Redcorn, Jim Red Corn’s son, by Jordan Poorman Cocker, January 19, 2021