Choctaw art

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Choctaw Indian Symbols, Choctaw Nation Oklahoma, Choctaw Tribe Tattoos, Choctaw Indian Tattoo, Choctaw Symbols, Choctaw Art, Choctaw Language, Choctaw Tribe, Maya Lopez

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Choctaw Art, Choctaw Indian, Ledger Art, Choctaw Nation, Art Native American, Native Artwork, Native American Regalia, Indian Baby, Prescott Az

This is a copy (archival print on Epson professional matte presentation paper). This image is also available on canvas. https://www.etsy.com/your/shops/ClarksonArt/tools/listings/section:18123392/992775013 The Choctaw, having their land in present day Mississippi taken from them, were forcibly removed to “Indian Territory” in what is now Oklahoma. Oklahoma was chosen because it was largely uninhabited and because several explorations of the territory had deemed the land barren and useless…

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Choctaw Art, Native American Knowledge, Choctaw Indian, Choctaw Nation, Native American Dance, Eastern Woodlands, Native American Artists, Painting Gallery, Native Art

Halito! Thank you for visiting my virtual painting gallery. I am a Choctaw Native American artist currently living in Arizona. My inspiration for this painting is the ancient Choctaw game of Stickball. "Victory Prayer" was awarded "Best of Show" at the Choctaw Art Show in Tvshka Homma in 2015, as well as "People Choice". It now hangs in the Choctaw Museum. A little history about the game: Ishtaboli, also known as the game of "stickball", is the Choctaw National sport. For participants and…

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Apuckshunubbee (ca. 1740–October 18, 1824) was one of three principal chiefs of the Choctaw Native American tribe in the early nineteenth century. He and the other two division chiefs signed several treaties with the United States, ceding land to settlers in the hope of ending their encroachment on Choctaw territory. On his way to Washington, DC in 1824 with the other two division chiefs and a Choctaw delegation to meet with US officials, Apukshunubbee suffered a fall and died. Choctaw Tribe, Jacob Miller, Choctaw Indian, Choctaw Nation, French Creole, Snapping Turtle, Native American Pictures, Indian Tribes, Native American Heritage

Apuckshunubbee (ca. 1740–October 18, 1824) was one of three principal chiefs of the Choctaw Native American tribe in the early nineteenth century. He and the other two division chiefs signed several treaties with the United States, ceding land to settlers in the hope of ending their encroachment on Choctaw territory. On his way to Washington, DC in 1824 with the other two division chiefs and a Choctaw delegation to meet with US officials, Apukshunubbee suffered a fall and died.

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