{{Short description|Native American painter}} {{Infobox artist | name = Dennis Cusick | image = | image_size = | alt = | caption = | birth_name = | birth_date = c. 1800 | birth_place = New York, US | death_date = 1824 | death_place = New York, US | known_for = Painting | training = Self-taught | movement = Iroquois Realist Movement | notable_works = | patrons = | awards = | elected = | website = }}

'''Dennis Cusick''' (c. 1800–1824) was a Tuscarora painter from New York and one of the founders of the Iroquois Realist Style of painting.

==Biography== Dennis Cusick was born c. 1800 to the Tuscarora tribe,{{refneeded|date=March 2025}} one of the Six Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy. His father was Nicholas Cusick (1758–1840), a Revolutionary War veteran who had fought with the Indian Rangers.{{refneeded|date=March 2025}} The family lived in Oneida County, New York, but moved to Niagara County, New York, when Nicholas was hired to be an interpreter and assistant to the local missions to the Tuscarora.{{refneeded|date=March 2025}} A missionary, Elkanah Holmes, wrote that Nicholas promised "to collect materials for making up an account of the present state of the Indians, as well as for a history of the ancient tribes inhabiting the state."<ref name="wcs">Sturtevant, William C. "Early Iroquois Realist Painting and Identity Marking." ''Three Centuries of Woodlands Indian Art. ''Vienna: ZKF Publishers, 2007: 129-143. {{ISBN|978-3-9811620-0-4}}.</ref>{{rp|129}}

This interest in documenting the lifeways and history of area tribes must have influenced his sons, particularly Dennis' older brother, David Cusick, who wrote and illustrated ''Sketches of Ancient History of the Six Nations'' in 1828.

In January 1818, Dennis joined the Tuscarora Congregational Church. He painted two watercolors to decorate collection boxes for the church. The Congregationalist mission supported a school on the Seneca Reservation at Buffalo Creek, New York.

Dennis died at the age of twenty-four.<ref name="wcs"/>

==Artwork== James Young, a teacher at the Buffalo Creek school, wrote about Dennis, "in acquiring the arts he has had no instruction except what he has received from copying."<ref name="wcs"/>{{rp|132}} Dennis was praised by another teacher, who said he "could draw well, and made his own colors from native woods."<ref name="wcs"/>{{rp|132}} He was also praised for his skill in calligraphy, which appears in his paintings. In Cusick's art, the fusion of Native and Euro-American motifs provides an authentic visual chronicle of the material changes in Native culture that resulted from the absorption of Christian values and themes.<ref>Kramer Russell, K., & Berlo, Janet Catherine et al. Shapeshifting: Transformations in Native American Art. Salem, Mass.: Peabody Essex Museum. 2012:167. {{ISBN|9780875772233}} </ref>

Two almost identical watercolor paintings were painted by Dennis to adorn collection boxes. "Seneca School House" is dated July 3, 1821, and "Seneca Mission House" is dated April 16, 1822.<ref name="wcs"/>{{rp|133}} They both feature the two-storey, log schoolhouse, both with a pitched roof, smoking chimney, and bell tower. To the left is a crowd of traditionally dressed Tuscarora warriors and boys. Tall trees flank the sides of the paintings and birds fly overhead. The later painting is precisely composed and more orderly overall.

A pair of 1821 watercolors features schoolchildren in class. "Seneca School House. July 16, 1821" portrays James Young teaching a crowd of Tuscarora boys. Books, desks, and windows dot the room. Dennis' flair for calligraphy in almost uncanny in its precision, as showcased in Biblical quotes, examples of script on a chalkboard, and minute vocabulary lessons in three languages, pinned on the walls. The ''gustoweh'' headdresses that adorn the older boys' heads indicate a continued Iroquois identity.<ref>Berlo, Janet C. and Ruth B. Phillips. ''Native North American Art.'' Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998: 214-5. {{ISBN|978-0-19-284218-3}}.</ref>

"Seneca Mission House, Nov. 15, 1821" features girls studying in Mrs. James Young's class. Quotes about the nature of work hover over a scene of Tuscarora girls, busy as a variety of spinning wheels, overseen by an elaborately coiffed Mrs. Young at the paintings' left.

Two of Dennis' other paintings survive. Dated March 4, 1822, "Evening Psalm" is a watercolor on paper, signed by the artist.<ref name="wcs"/>{{rp|135}} The painting features two Tuscarora warriors – one standing with a bow, the other seated with two firearms – and a Tuscarora woman with a baby resting on her shoulder, tucked inside her robe. The three are flanked by loose, painterly foliage, and a dense tree, in which Dennis scraped the paint away to produce highlights. The background is filled with undulating blue hills, lined with evergreen trees. The narrow slice of sky is filled with a variety of cloud formations, and a minute sun tucked in the far left corner. Details of the figures' faces are minimal. Dennis relies on outlining to define shapes and cross-hatching to provide shadows and mass. Above the scene, the artist wrote a psalm in Seneca and English.

The last painting, "Christening of the Tuscarora Asa Thompson," is unsigned but dated 1821. Attribution is based on style and documentation that accompanied the painting.<ref name="wcs"/>{{rp|137}} The watercolor painting features a Tuscarora woman handing her baby to an Iroquois man, wearing a fingerwoven sash, leggings, and moccasins. To his right in the minister, holding a Bible and extending his right hand. Both men have top hats. The background foliage is even more whimsical than that of "Evening Psalm." Swaying trees cover rolling hills around the edges of the scene, but the center of the painting has large unpainted, negative space, providing contrast the figures.

==Legacy== Dennis was one of the Early Iroquois Realists, who included at least five other painters, David Cusick, Thomas Jacobs (either a Tuscarora or Seneca), and anonymous artists of the Cattaraugus Seneca and Oneida tribes. They are known today only by twenty-five surviving paintings.<ref name="wcs"/>{{rp|29}} Their work was a departure from previous Iroquois art forms and paved the way for Native Americans to use new materials from the global community to express their contemporary realities. Jesse Cornplanter (Seneca) carried on the realist tradition in the early 20th century.<ref>[http://www.iroquoismuseum.org/painting.htm Painting.] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090915193649/http://www.iroquoismuseum.org/painting.htm |date=2009-09-15 }} The Iroquois Museum (retrieved 12 Feb 2009).</ref>

==References== <references/> {{North American Indigenous visual artists}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Cusick, Dennis}} Category:1800s births Category:1824 deaths Category:19th-century American male artists Category:19th-century American painters Category:19th-century Haudenosaunee people Category:American Congregationalists Category:American male painters Category:American watercolorists Category:Native American male artists Category:Native American painters Category:Native American people from New York (state) Category:Tuscarora people Category:Haudenosaunee artists