Wasco Totem
Portland Art Museum
2000.34
Lillian Pitt is a local Native American artist whose work reflects her Wasco heritage. She did not become an artist until age 38 when she began working with clay. Now, Pitt works with a variety of materials and is a renowned sculptor, jeweler, and printmaker, as well as an advocate for Native American art. She is especially well known for her masks and other small clay figures that are inspired by the stories of her people that she was taught as a child. The petroglyphs along the Columbia River and other traditional Wasco images have also served as a major source of inspiration. In Wasco Totem, Pitt has created clay forms with traditional Wasco motifs that are similar to those found on baskets, beadwork, and stone carvings. These clay pieces are then assembled on a rough-hewn board and attached with brass nails and wire. The result serves as a monument to the Wasco people. The similarity of the image to a crucifixion also refers to the tremendous struggles that the Wasco and other Native Peoples have endured.
-
Collection History Provenance
Museum Purchase: Auction Proceeds Fund.
- Type of Item sculpture
- Culture American, Wasco, Warm Springs, Interior Salish, Yakama
- Material anagama fired clay, cedar wood, copper metal
- Measurements height 56.0 in, width 18.0 in, depth 5.0 in (overall)
- Creator Lillian Pitt
- Creation Date during 1996
- Categories Plateau; Western Oregon; Sculpture