Prairie Chicken

Copied Edward Kemeys, Prairie Chicken, ca. 1870s, bronze, 15 1288 in., Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Charlotte J. Patterson and Herbert L. Patterson in memory of Elizabeth Z. Patterson, 2002.78
Free to use

Artwork Details

Title
Prairie Chicken
Date
ca. 1870s
Location
Not on view
Dimensions
15 1288 in.
Credit Line
Gift of Charlotte J. Patterson and Herbert L. Patterson in memory of Elizabeth Z. Patterson
Mediums Description
bronze
Classifications
Subjects
  • Animal — bird — grouse
Object Number
2002.78

Artwork Description

In the 1860s and 1870s, prairie chicken leks, or breeding grounds, were a common sight across the Midwest. As more settlers moved westward, however, farmers converted tall-grass prairie to cropland. Edward Kemeys's sculpting career began just before prairie chicken populations shrank from habitat loss. Here he preserves and celebrates the male of the species by accurately depicting the bird's form, paying particular attention to the characteristic eyebrow texture and long pointed neck feathers, called pinnae. Kemeys also took care when modeling the bird's posture. The angled pinnae show this male poised for display or attack.