Courting
Fine Arts Collection
U.S. General Services Administration
In traditional Potawatomi dress,
a man faces a woman who returns his gaze in a tender scene titled Courting by Potawatomi artist Woody
Crumbo. The couple stands in a nondescript landscape with tufts of grass and
flowing reeds surrounding them. The man wraps a decorated robe made of buffalo
hide around himself and the woman. Using intricate line work, Crumbo details
the beading and ornamental designs in the clothing.
Woodrow Wilson Crumbo, better known as Woody
Crumbo, was Director of Art at Bacone College in Muskogee, Oklahoma, when he
traveled to Washington, D.C. to complete his mural series at the new Department
of the Interior building in 1940. He was one of four Native American artists
who painted 2,200 feet of murals for the eighth-floor penthouse, which served
as the employee lounge. While Crumbo painted the south corridor, Zia Pueblo
artist Velino Herrera covered the north corridor. In the main room, the walls were
divided between Chiricahua Apache artist Allan Houser and Navajo painter Gerald
Nailor. The Secretary of the Interior, Harold Ickes, insisted on commissioning
artwork by Native American artists. Because of this mandate, the Section of
Fine Arts invited Crumbo, Herrera, Houser, and Nailor to participate in the
penthouse project and contacted two Kiowa artists, James Auchiah and Stephen
Mopope, to paint murals for the cafeteria.