|
Solid ceramic anthropomorphic warrior figure fragment |
|
Mesoamerican; Aztec |
54.7287 |
clay |
|
Ivory bear effigy toggle |
|
Arctic, Inuit |
83.1292 |
Ivory |
|
Young Chief |
Willard Stone, Willard Stone |
Native American; Cherokee descent |
11.51 |
wood |
|
Bear Up a Tree |
Unidentified |
American |
TU2009.39.6791 |
gelatin silver process |
|
Tuxcacuesco-Ortices style solid flat male figure |
|
Mesoamerican |
54.3477 |
clay |
|
Obsidian human effigy figure |
|
Mesoamerican |
61.8539 |
obsidian |
|
Ceramic human figure head fragment |
|
Mesoamerican; Zapotec |
54.7387 |
clay |
|
War Dancers |
Charles Marion Russell, Roman Bronze Works, Dr. Philip G. Cole Collection |
American |
08.31 |
lost-wax cast in bronze |
|
An Enemy that Warns |
Charles Marion Russell, Roman Bronze Works, Dr. Philip G. Cole Collection |
American |
08.25 |
lost-wax cast in bronze |
|
Ixtlan del Rio style solid ceramic human figure |
|
Mesoamerican; West Mexican |
54.3891 |
clay, slip, paint |
|
Lewis and Clark and Sacajawea Bronze |
Unidentified |
American |
TU2009.39.6913.4 |
gelatin silver process |
|
Indian Dancer |
Unidentified |
American |
TU2009.39.6924.1a |
gelatin silver process |
|
From Phil Townsend Hanna to Nancy C. Russell |
Philip T. Hanna, Nancy C Russell |
American |
TU2009.39.1333 |
ink on paper |
|
Ceramic human figure head fragment |
|
Mesoamerican |
54.7425 |
clay |
|
Ceramic human figure head fragment |
|
Mesoamerican |
54.7631 |
clay |
|
Jade human face effigy figure |
|
Mesoamerican |
55.104 |
jade |
|
Ceramic human figure head fragment |
|
Mesoamerican; Mayan |
54.7450 |
clay |
|
Ixtlan del Rio style hollow ceramic funerary effigy sculpture |
|
Mesoamerican; West Mexican |
54.4157 |
clay, slip, paint |
|
Portrait of Male Sculptor with Sculpture of Charles M. Russell |
Unidentified |
American |
TU2009.39.6940 |
gelatin silver process |
|
Small model cowboy with blue striped shirt and red handkerchief |
Charles Marion Russell |
American |
TU2009.39.151 |
largely wax on an iron armature. textile cord for rope. Some wax is internally pigmented and there is likely some paint applied to the surface. |