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  2. The End of the Trail is a sculpture by James Earle Fraser. Fraser created the original version of the work in 1894, and he subsequently produced numerous replicas in both plaster and bronze. The sculpture depicts a weary Native American man, wearing only the remains of a blanket and carrying a spear.

  3. End of the Trail. Drawn from Fraser’s experiences growing up in Dakota Territory in the 1880s, this exhausted Native man seated on a windblown pony is an evocative comment on the damaging effects of Euro-American settler colonization on Indigenous peoples.

  4. Learn about the history and meaning of The End of the Trail, a sculpture by James Earle Fraser depicting a weary Native American and his horse. The statue is a symbol of the American frontier and a masterpiece of art.

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  5. Fraser's sculpture End of the Trail. Among his earliest works were sculptural pieces at the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893 and, for the 1915 Panama–Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, one of his most famous pieces, End of the Trail.

  6. A bronze sculpture by James Earle Fraser depicting a tired Sioux and his horse at the end of their journey. The work reflects the genocide of Native American peoples by westward expansion and is part of The Art Institute of Chicago's collection.

  7. Feb 19, 2014 · Learn how James Earle Fraser's End of the Trail, a bronze sculpture of a Native American warrior, became an iconic symbol of the American West. Explore the different interpretations and uses of this work over time, from its original meaning as a critique of Euro-American expansion to its contemporary reinterpretation as a sign of resilience and strength.

  8. Jul 17, 2020 · Fraser’s “The End of the Trail” evokes sympathy not righteousness, a post-conquest respect rather than a guilty call for attempting to undo what Helen Hunt Jackson called a century of dishonor.

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