Raskolnikov, from Times of Winnipeg:
I have met many indian artists. Although most are not as radical as Eh, many, if not all, of them, seem very limited in outlook. They can paint one hell of an eagle and their headresses bow before no one; when I ask them, however, as artists, how they feel towards, say, Leonardo and his use of sfumato, a key technique that I often see in indian painting and it’s use of bold color and transitional shadowing/lighting, I often get no reply, or a simple grunt of dissmissal. The vibe I get is that these artists either have no idea who Leonardo, Raphael, Giotto et all are, or else they do know and don’t care, these foreign artists and the connotation of being representatives of oppressive colonial countries rendering them irrelevant. (Not that Italy handed over many pox-infected blankets, but maybe I’m just splitting hairs)

“handed over many pox-infected blankets”
“This myth
http://www.billingsgazette.com/index.php?id=1&display=rednews/2003/01/25/build/local/65-epidemic.inc
that the fur traders perpetrated smallpox upon the tribes of the Upper Missouri, that is just not true,” …….
“This has grown up as folklore, perpetuated from generation to generation.
they were trading partners and because many of the fur-traders took Indian wives, the idea of intentional infection makes no sense,…….