Storage Bags
Portland Art Museum
87.88.95A,B
After the introduction of horses, Plains Indian peoples became much more mobile. Horses allowed them to stay on the move, following the buffalo herds. By necessity, everything families owned had to be portable; they needed a variety of containers to pack belongings when the camp was moved. This pair of Lakota storage bags might have been mounted on saddle bags and would have held anything from clothing to food. They are made from tanned leather and decorated with porcupine quill embroidery across the front, with a beaded strip along each side and across the top flap. Tin cones and dyed horsehair further accent the beaded strips.
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Collection History Provenance
The Elizabeth Cole Butler Collection.
- Type of Item saddle bag
- Culture Lakota
- Material leather, porcupine quill, glass bead, metal cone, dyed horsehair
- Measurements height 14.0 in, width 24.0 in (overall)
- Creator Lakota artist
- Creation Date during 1890
- Categories Plains; Animal Equipment