Andy Warhol American, 1928-1987
Sitting Bull (FS IIIA.70), 1986
Screenprint on Lenox Museum Board
91.4 x 91.4 cm
35 49/50 x 35 49/50 in.
35 49/50 x 35 49/50 in.
In Sitting Bull, Warhol takes the commanding image of the Lakota leader and recasts it through his pop-art lens: the figure stands half-length, his face calm and unassuming, yet his...
In Sitting Bull, Warhol takes the commanding image of the Lakota leader and recasts it through his pop-art lens: the figure stands half-length, his face calm and unassuming, yet his presence is elevated by the bold colour treatment and flat, graphic surface. The native headdress, the feathers, the long braids are rendered with clarity, but the palette—rich reds, blues and soft yellows—alters the familiar historical photograph into a stylised icon. The background is clean and spare, placing the focus entirely on the figure, whose gaze meets the viewer directly. Through this transformation, Warhol invites us to consider how historical personalities become symbols in mass culture: here the venerable chief is both subject and spectacle, both “real man” and reproduced image. The traditional identity of the leader is thus reframed—Warhol’s use of colour, scale, and repetition turns the figure into a cultural artefact, touching upon themes of memory, myth, and image-economy in the American West and in twentieth-century visual culture.
