Ten blue horses streak across the page in the Pony Express Fine Art Print by Piikani/Blackfeet artist John Isaiah Pepion. In nineteen shades of blue—from aqua to azure—these horses pay tribute to the horse culture of the Plains people.
“Horses were vital to the Plains way of life,” says John. “Hunting, war, traveling—we used horses for all of it. Horses often appeared on traditional ledger art as part of the battle and hunting stories Blackfeet artists told, they were that important to our lifestyle.”
John is known for his work as a contemporary ledger artist, continuing an art form that began in the mid-1800s. “Captured Plains warriors were imprisoned in a penitentiary in Florida,” shares John. “The US Government gave them used paper from old ledger books with some crayons and pencils to draw with. While Plains people had traditionally used earth pigments to paint scenes on hides, these warriors adapted, continuing to tell their stories but with these new materials.” The use of ledger paper became widespread among Plains artists, who recorded scenes of battles, horse raids, stories, and more on this highly-portable medium. Artists used ledger paper from accounting books, as well as receipts, certificates, and sometimes even currency.
“Traditionally, only Plains men created ledger art, but now artists of all genders create ledger art. The artform has expanded beyond Plains tribes, too, and now many Native artists work on ledger paper.”
John drew the original Pony Express on antique silk ledger paper from a Virginia City company’s courier log dated September 2, 1891. This archival print of John’s original drawing is printed right here in our Seattle studio on acid-free paper.
Like John's style? Shop his other products in John's "shop by artist" section.
Our Native-designed fine art prints are created in our studio on archival paper. This is one more example of our Native business taking back production so we can further invest in our artists and community!
Known as giclée prints (pronounced "zhe-clay"), our fine art prints are distinguished from mass-produced prints due to their quality, longevity, and value. We print using a state-of-the-art, large-format fine art printer in our Seattle-based art studio. Because they're printed on acid-free paper, our prints won't degrade over time, and when displayed out of direct sunlight will maintain their color saturation and fine detail for decades.
- Giclée fine art print (unframed)
- Open edition; made by Eighth Generation
- 20" x 16" artwork size (w/ 1" border on the top and sides and a 2" border on the bottom: total print size including margins = 22" x 19.5")
- Canson Aquarelle Rag 310 gsm paper meets the highest archival standards
- Professionally packaged and shipped flat
- Hand signed by the artist
- Eighth Generation’s fine art prints include "AC" for "Artist Centered." This unique denotation references our purposeful effort to align business practices with artist interests rather than collector interests.
- Original work is pen and marker on antique silk ledger paper
Thank you for supporting Inspired Natives®, not "Native-inspired."