Early Native American Abstract Artist Mary Sully at The Met
"Working without patronage, in near obscurity, and largely self-taught, Sully produced approximately 200 intricately designed and vividly colored drawings in colored pencil, graphite, and ink on paper that captured meaningful aspects of her Dakota community mixed with visual elements observed from other Native nations and the aesthetics of urban life. Euro-American celebrities from popular culture, politics, and religion inspired some of her most striking works, which she called "personality prints"—abstract portraits arranged as vertical triptychs." The Metropolitan Museum of Art