Bishkisché Set 11 (Bear Keeps Going / Cuts The Hair Rope / Full Belly / Good Now)

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Photo by Paul Salveson.
Bishkisché Set 11 (Bear Keeps Going / Cuts The Hair Rope / Full Belly / Good Now)
Photo by Paul Salveson.
Artist/Maker (Apsáalooke, born 1981)
Date2023
MediumAcrylic, graphite, kitakata paper, coated pastel paper
DimensionsOverall (Each): 20 × 28 in. (50.8 × 71.1 cm) Frame (Each): 22 1/4 × 30 1/4 × 1 1/8 in. (56.5 × 76.8 × 2.9 cm)
Credit LinePurchase, William G. Roehrick '34 Art Acquisition and Preservation Fund.
Object number2024.20.1-4
Not on view
DescriptionWendy Red Star’s Bishkisché Set 11 contains four of over 200 painted designs based on original decorated bishkisché, which are utilitarian rawhide cases/bags traditionally made by Apsáalooke (Crow) women and women of other Indigenous North American groups. Red Star was initially inspired to create the bishkisché sets in 2022, when she was working on a Public Art Fund project to decorate bus shelters in New York, Boston, and Chicago. She visited multiple archival institutions to see what objects they had obtained from her own community and, although she was familiar with bishkisché, she was inspired by just how many variations of the cases that she found. Red Star went on to create a catalog of over one thousand bishkisché from different collections and websites. Despite the fact that bishkisché were used as utilitarian objects, they were also creatively decorated and often passed down as generational keepsakes. Red Star notes, “These leather cases, painted with intricate geometric designs, hold layers of cultural significance that go beyond their functional use.” Bishkisché are traditionally made using prepared hide that has been washed and treated before being stretched and staked down. The designs are then painted quickly while the hide is still wet, and they are always painted in matching pairs, many of which are now separated by time and trade. The cases that Red Star cataloged are typically listed with a tribal affiliation, but the names of the women that crafted them are mostly lost. Instead, to give titles to her bishkisché designs, Red Star went back to census data from her tribe from 1885 to the 1940s and collected the names of women. She sees this use of names (including Bear Keeps Going/Cuts the Hair Rope/Full Belly/Good Now), and the recreation of bishkisché designs, as methods of “communing” with the women who came before her.

Additional Details

Exhibition History "Wendy Red Star: Bíikkua (The Hide Scraper)," July 13 – August 24, 2024. Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, CA.
Published References Sara Roffino, "Artist Wendy Red Star Pays Homage to Her Ancestors With Hundreds of Paintings on View in Los Angeles," Cultured Magazine, August 16, 2024.

"Wendy Red Star: Bíikkua (The Hide Scraper), July 13 – August 24, 2024." Los Angeles: Roberts Projects, 2024. 32pp.

Signature 2024.20.1-4, recto, lower right corner (pencil): "RS"
Inscribed 2024.20.1, recto, lower left corner (pencil): "#18"
2024.20.1, recto, lower right (pencil): "BEAR KEEPS GOING"

2024.20.2, recto, lower left corner (pencil): "#127"
2024.20.2, recto, lower right (pencil): "CUTS THE HAIR ROPE"

2024.20.3, recto, lower left corner (pencil): "#176"
2024.20.3, recto, lower right (pencil): "FULL BELLY"

2024.20.4, recto, lower left corner (pencil): "#218"
2024.20.4, recto, lower right (pencil): "GOOD NOW"
Photograph by John Bentham.
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Object number: 2016.18
© Wendy Red Star. Image courtesy of Sargent's Daughters, New York. For educational purposes onl…
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Object number: 2019.16.2
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Object number: 2019.16.7
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Photograph by John Bentham.
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