Drawings by Etahdleuh Doanmoe
Kiowa
Etahdleuh Doanmoe created these images while imprisoned at Fort Marion in St. Augustine, Florida.
Men from North American Plains cultures have a long tradition of documenting events through images, often on materials such as stone, buffalo hides, and tipi tents. Their drawings depict warriors’ achievements, hunting, ceremonies, and everyday life, serving both as historical documentation and personal narratives. In the late 1800s, Native Americans were forced off their land into reservations. Refusal meant imprisonment at various forts, one of the most common being Fort Marion in St. Augustine, Florida. The lack of access to traditional materials led this visual documentation to shift to discarded accounting books, so-called ledgers.
In the film, Steven Tamayo, Sicangu Lakota, consultant and artist, talks about how items in museum collections tell stories of a diversity of cultures and traditions. Steven Tamayo is a frequently consulted expert on North American Indigenous cultures and the founder of the Bluebird Cultural Initiative.