Bigfoot Memorial Ride Metal Print
by Robert Running Fisher Upham
Product Details
Bigfoot Memorial Ride metal print by Robert Running Fisher Upham. Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of a metal print. Your image gets printed directly onto a sheet of 1/16" thick aluminum. The aluminum sheet is offset from the wall by a 3/4" thick wooden frame which is attached to the back. The high gloss of the aluminum sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results.
Design Details
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3 - 4 business days
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Artist's Description
Bigfoot Memorial Ride
“In 1876, the 7th Cavalry was soundly defeated at Little Bighorn. This defeat festered in the minds of American civilians and military alike, creating fear and anger. The Ghost Dance brought Indians from all tribes together, which flamed these fears, opening the way for one of the most ignoble acts by the 7th Cavalry, the Wounded Knee Massacre, in which women children and elders were killed in the snow of December 29, 1890.
The A.I.M. of my art is to lift up the memory of my ancestors, so they are never forgotten. In 2016, I was able to witness and participate in the memorial for the casualties of Wounded Knee. The signatures on this ledger are of the riders who were present at Porcupine, Wounded Knee and at the final destination at Pine Ridge. The girl on the white horse led the ride in at the end. “
Robert “Running Fisher” Upham, aka Harlem Indian
About Robert Running Fisher Upham
Robert “Running Fisher” Upham is a mixed-blood Indian, (enrolled member of Lake Traverse Sioux, community member by blood from Salish, Gros Ventre, Assiniboine, and Pend Oreille tribes). He has a history of social justice activism combined with being a chronicler and artist. At age 32 , he walked across the United States with American Indian Movement founder Dennis Banks. He produced a winter count on elk hide in support of the freedom of Leonard Peltier as part of that walk. In 1998, at age 36, he led a 35-mile march about genocidal legal practices in Indian Country. The march was from Denver to Boulder, to the headquarters of one of the institutions that has failed to change these practices. In 2014, his cousin requested that he...
$111.00
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