Nez
Perce tribal elder Horace Axtell sang a blessing song Tuesday
at Bozeman's Chief Joseph Middle School to thank students and
teachers for creating a large painting of the school's namesake,
the chief who led his people through a tragic war in 1877.
The 12-foot-long
painting depicts Chief Joseph, whose Indian name means Thunder Traveling
Over the Mountains, mounted on horseback in his home territory at
Wallowa Lake in Idaho.
It's a beautiful
painting, said Axtell, 79, who traveled more than 400 miles for
the event. He wore a traditional feather headdress and fringed and
beaded buckskin clothing.
"You see the
buffalo, the water, the mountains, the clouds, the eagle -- all
part of our way of life, because our way of life is connected to
nature," he said.
More than 500 sixth-,
seventh- and eighth-graders applauded warmly when he was finished.
Chief Joseph was
very concerned about education, Wilfred "Scotty" Scott,
73, a Nez Perce tribal executive committee member, told the students.
"I know his spirit is surely smiling down on you."
The painting was
started last October, said art teacher Brian Zimmer, thanks in large
part to Kathryn Darling, a Chief Joseph parent who was the school's
artist in residence, and a $2,000 grant from the Sweet Pea Festival.
Scores of students,
especially those in the Art Club, worked on the painting, often
after school, during recess and lunch breaks.
"I think it's
really awesome," said Rachel Pohl, 11.
Kari Shelkey, 12,
said it was "pretty cool" meeting the Nez Perce elders.
"At first,
we didn't know, like, what we were painting about," she said.
"We didn't really know who he was."
Scott and his wife,
Bessie, came to the school in January to explain who Chief Joseph
was. Scott told the story of his wife's great-great-grandparents,
who were both wounded in the Battle of the Big Hole when the U.S.
Army attacked on Aug. 9, 1877.
Chief Joseph fled
with his people through Yellowstone National Park toward Canada,
but the cavalry caught them just short of the border. Chief Joseph
vowed then to fight no more, and he held true to his word, Axtell
said.
Darling taught students
how to stretch the canvas, apply gesso, translate small sketches
to a larger scale using grids, mix acrylic paint and paint over
mistakes. She painted the face of Chief Joseph and his horse, and
students basically did the rest.
The best part for
her, she said, was hearing students say, "'I can paint!'"
and exposing them to the Nez Perce history.
"You're changed
when you see another culture," she said. "You are not
the only ones on planet Earth."
This summer the
painting will be on display at the Gallatin County Courthouse. Color
prints of the painting and a metal replica of its eagle will be
sold to raise money for the school's art program, Darling said.
Scott said the Nez
Perce today are not angry over what happened a century ago.
"To pack hate
and animosity," he said, patting his heart, "creates hate
and animosity."
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