Mary Sully: Native Modern at The Met 5th Avenue, July 18, 2024 – January 12, 2025 

“The Metropolitan Museum of Art presents the exhibition Mary Sully: Native Modern, opening July 18, 2024. Born Susan Mabel Deloria on the Standing Rock Reservation in South Dakota, Mary Sully (1896–1963) was a little-known, reclusive Yankton Dakota artist who, between the 1920s and 1940s, produced highly distinctive work informed by her Native American and settler ancestry. The exhibition is part of The American Wing at 100, a series of gallery reinstallations and exhibitions marking the wing’s 2024 centennial. 

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. 

Featuring 25 rarely seen Sully compositions—primarily her ‘personality prints’—as well as archival family material and other Native American items from The Met collection, the exhibition offers a fresh and nuanced lens through which to consider American art and life in the early 20th century.” — The Metropolitan Museum of Art 

Mary Sully, Alice. ca. 1920s–40s. 
Colored pencil, black ink, gilt, white paint, pastel crayon, on paper, 34 3/8 × 19 in. (87.3 × 48.3 cm). Top panel: 12 7/8 × 18 in. Center panel: 12 × 19 in. Bottom panel:
9 1/2 × 12 in.)
Mary Sully, Lunt & Fontaine (Alfred Lunt, American, 1892 – 1977), (Lynn Louise Fontainne, Born, UK 1887, died America, 1983). ca. 1920s–40s. 
Colored pencil, black ink, gilt, white paint, pastel crayon, on paper, 34 3/8 × 19 in. (87.3 × 48.3 cm). Top panel: 12 7/8 × 18 in. Center panel: 12 × 19 in. Bottom panel: 9 1/2 × 12 in.)
Mary Sully. Eugene Field (American, 1850 – 1895).
ca. 1920s–40s. Colored pencil, black ink, gilt, white paint, pastel crayon, on paper. 34 3/8 × 19 in. (87.3 × 48.3 cm). Top panel: 12 7/8 × 18 in. Center panel:
12 × 19 in. Bottom panel: 9 1/2 × 12 in.
Mary Sully, JT (Julia). ca. 1920s–40s. Colored
pencil, black ink, gilt, white paint, pastel crayon, on paper, 34 3/8 × 19 in. (87.3 × 48.3 cm). Top panel: 12 7/8 × 18 in. Center panel: 12 × 19 in. Bottom panel: 9 1/2 × 12 in.)
Mary Sully, Babe Ruth (American, 1895 – 1948). ca. 1920s–40s. Colored pencil, black ink, gilt, white paint, pastel crayon, on paper, 34 3/8 × 19 in. (87.3 × 48.3 cm). Top panel: 12 7/8 × 18 in. Center panel: 12 × 19 in. Bottom panel: 9 1/2 × 12 in.)
Mary Sully, Gertrude Stein (American, 1874 – 1946). ca. 1920s–40s. Colored pencil, black ink, gilt, white paint, pastel crayon, on paper, 34 3/8 × 19 in. (87.3 × 48.3 cm). Top panel: 12 7/8 × 18 in. Center panel:
12 × 19 in. Bottom panel: 9 1/2 × 12 in.)

“This compelling exhibition celebrates how Mary Sully’s cultural sensibilities influenced her unconventional body of work,” said Max Hollein, The Met’s Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer. “Sully translated her life and experiences into a unique graphic language, culminating in an intensely creative perspective from which to consider Indigenous cultures and imagery.”

Sylvia Yount, Lawrence A. Fleischman Curator in Charge of the American Wing, said: “We’re thrilled to present Mary Sully: Native Modern as a special feature of the department’s 100th anniversary in 2024. Born of particular Native and Euro-American cultural entanglements, Sully’s work is highly relevant and resonant for the American Wing, The Met’s historic department of a broadly defined American art by diverse makers, with a deepening concentration of work by women and artists of color.”

Images courtesy The Metropolitan Museum of Art.