2014: 50 Works for 50 Years

Andrew Standing Soldier

"untitled (woman on horseback with travois)"

Andrew Standing Soldier was born in 1917 on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation of South Dakota and died in 1967 in Omaha, Nebraska. He studied mural painting at the Oglala Community College in Pine Ridge and during 1939-41 was a mural painter in the Dakotas, Idaho and Nebraska under the Works Progress Administration.

He returned to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in the 1940s to work almost exclusively in watercolor. He completed much of this work as commissions, including several primers for American Indian children sponsored by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. His paintings primarily depict contemporary life on the Reservation, portraits of notable Native Americans and of ranchers’ prize livestock.

In 1961, Standing Soldier and his family moved to the Reservation border town of Gordon, Nebraska. There he found a patron in Douglas Borman, a local auto dealer. Borman supplied a place for Standing Soldier to paint in the auto showroom and proceeded to collect a significant body of the artist’s work.

Andrew Standing Soldier, untitled (woman on horseback with travois), watercolor on paper, n.d. South Dakota Art Museum Collection, 2014.02.3. Gift of Dave and Betty Strain.
Andrew Standing Soldier
untitled (woman on horseback with travois)
watercolor on paper, n.d.
South Dakota Art Museum Collection, 2014.02.3.
Gift of Dave and Betty Strain.

South Dakota Art Museum makes no representation that it is the owner of any copyright in the works of art in its collection. It is the user’s responsibility to obtain necessary permissions and pay required fees for the use of copyrighted material. Users are held fully responsible for any infringement of copyright.

Photo of South Dakota Art Museum
South Dakota Art Museum
Physical Address
1036 Medary Ave.
Brookings, SD 57007
Mailing Address
South Dakota Art Museum, Box 2250
Brookings, SD 57007
Hours
Mon - Fri: 10:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m.
Sat: 10:00 a.m.-4:00 p.m.
Sun: 12:00 p.m.-4:00 p.m.
Closed: Sundays January-March and all State Holidays

Museum Parking: Just west of the museum on Harvey Dunn Street (926 Harvey Dunn St. on GPS). Check in at the front desk for a parking pass.
Follow Us