Protest of the Sioux explained

Protest of the Sioux, also known as The Protest, is a 1904 equestrian statue by Cyrus Dallin. It was the third of four important statues of indigenous people on horseback commonly known as The Epic of the Indian, which also includes A Signal of Peace (1890), The Medicine Man (1899), and Appeal to the Great Spirit (1908).

The statue depicts a mounted Sioux warrior wearing a war bonnet defiantly shaking his right fist. According to Rell G. Francis, it depicts "a Sioux chief vigorously protesting the confiscation of his lands and buffalo by the white man".[1]

A monumental version made of staff was exhibited at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, held in St. Louis, Missouri in 1904, where it won a gold medal. The temporary statue was retained after the exhibition, but rapidly deteriorated. Unlike the three other statues in the series, Protest of the Sioux was never cast as a full-size bronze, so it survives only in statuette form. Bronzes high were cast by Gorham Manufacturing Company in the early 1900s, and a similar bronze is at the Springville Museum of Art in Springville, Utah.[2] [3] It was cast in 1986 from a bronze version made by Dallin in 1903 which is held by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.[4] An example of the bronze statuette was sold at Christie's in 2006 for US$36,000.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Quoted at Cyrus Edwin Dallin (1861-1944), The Protest, Christie's, 2 March 2006
  2. https://siris-artinventories.si.edu/ipac20/ipac.jsp?session=EV36329897Y62.1484&profile=ariall&source=~!siartinventories&view=subscriptionsummary&uri=full=3100001~!318055~!0&ri=4&aspect=Browse&menu=search&ipp=20&spp=20&staffonly=&term=Dallin,+Cyrus+Edwin,+1861-1944,+sculptor.+(copy+after)&index=AUTHOR&uindex=&aspect=Browse&menu=search&ri=4 The Protest
  3. https://webkiosk.springville.org/Obj232?sid=54&x=455334 Protest, 1904, Cyrus Edwin Dallin
  4. https://collections.mfa.org/objects/40057/the-protest;jsessionid=22DE255EEA8E4302A25D65A9F84AC746 The Protest