End of the Trail
Drawn from Fraser’s experiences growing up in Dakota Territory in the 1880s, this exhausted Native man seated on a windblown pony is an evocative comment on the damaging effects of Euro-American settler colonization on Indigenous peoples. "End of the Trail" exemplifies the western subjects created by French-trained artists such as Fraser, who were expressing themselves at once as American, through their choice of themes, and as modern, through their command of current aesthetics.
Read a Native Perspective on this work.
Read a Native Perspective on this work.
Artwork Details
- Title: End of the Trail
- Artist: James Earle Fraser (American, Winona, Minnesota 1876–1953 Westport, Connecticut)
- Founder: Cast by Roman Bronze Works
- Date: 1918, cast 1918
- Culture: American
- Medium: Bronze
- Dimensions: 33 x 26 x 8 3/4 in. (83.8 x 66 x 22.2 cm)
- Credit Line: Purchase, Friends of the American Wing Fund, Mr. and Mrs. S. Parker Gilbert Gift, Morris K. Jesup and 2004 Benefit Funds, 2010
- Object Number: 2010.73
- Curatorial Department: The American Wing
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