Amon Carter print details

Going in to Trade

Buffalo Meat (1847-1917)

Object Details

  • Date

    1876

  • Object Type

    Drawings

  • Medium

    Colored pencil, graphite, and ink on paper

  • Object Format

    Book

  • Dimensions

    8 3/4 x 11 1/4 in.

  • Inscriptions

    Recto:

    u.l. inscribed in red pencil: Buffalo Meat

    l.c. in graphite: Going in to Trade-

  • Credit Line

    Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas

  • Accession Number

    1965.48.7

  • Copyright

    Public domain

Object Description

In 1875 Buffalo Meat, a young Southern Cheyenne man, was arrested and transferred to Fort Marion in St. Augustine, Florida, where he was imprisoned alongside roughly 40 Arapaho, Cheyenne, Comanche, Kiowa, and other Native Americans who had been detained following altercations with army soldiers in Oklahoma Territory. At the fort, Buffalo Meat and his fellow prisoners were encouraged to make autobiographical drawings on sheets of repurposed ledger paper. This experimental project was initiated by prison commander Captain Richard Henry Pratt, an early proponent of off-reservation boarding schools, a coercive educational system that attempted to assimilate Indigenous peoples into White society and culture.

Buffalo Meat and his companions produced scores of drawings at Fort Marion, many of which they sold to curious visitors. Although created in repressive conditions, ledger drawings afforded a space for imprisoned men to portray scenes that asserted their status within their own communities—a form of cultural self-preservation that resisted Pratt’s assimilationist aims.

—Text taken from the Carter Handbook (2023).

Additional details

Location: Off view
W28-artist-CMYK-CarterBlack
See more by Buffalo Meat

Tags

Educator Resources
  • Grades 4–8

    Who Paints Your Story? Indigenous Depictions in Art (monthly special; available year-round by request)

    Take a closer look at depictions of Indigenous communities in American art and introduce students to contemporary Indigenous artists from the Carter collection. Students will examine icons and stereotypes, the importance of representation, and the reclamation of culture.

    Learn more and register by visiting Connect2Texas and filter for “Amon Carter Museum of American Art.” If you have questions, contact us by email or call 817.989.5011.

Amon Carter Disclaimer

This information is published from the Carter's collection database. Updates and additions based on research and imaging activities are ongoing. The images, titles, and inscriptions are products of their time and are presented here as documentation, not as a reflection of the Carter’s values. If you have corrections or additional information about this object please email us to help us improve our records.

Every effort has been made to accurately determine the rights status of works and their images. Please email us if you have further information on the rights status of a work contrary or in addition to the information in our records.