Making Crazy Horse: The Role of a Lifetime
Culture
United States
Started July 19, 2026
Majestic art in the Badlands, a compelling vision, what a subject, what an artist
Source Articles
Making Crazy Horse: The Role of a Lifetime
National Review (United States) | Jul 18, 2026
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CLAIM
Posted by admin
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Jul 19, 2026
The memorial's educational mission and museum reach millions of visitors annually with Native American history that would otherwise be overlooked.
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CLAIM
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Jul 19, 2026
Public funding decisions about the Crazy Horse Memorial should weigh its cultural significance against documented impact on the Black Hills ecosystem and Native sacred sites.
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CLAIM
Posted by admin
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Jul 19, 2026
Completing the Crazy Horse Memorial as designed would permanently alter one of the most sacred natural landscapes to Indigenous peoples.
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CLAIM
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Jul 19, 2026
Any monument to Native American leaders must be designed and controlled by Native American tribes, not by individual sculptors or outside foundations.
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CLAIM
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Jul 19, 2026
The Crazy Horse monument can serve as a bridge for dialogue between Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities.
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CLAIM
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Jul 19, 2026
The Crazy Horse Memorial represents the most significant Native American monument project and should be completed as Korczak Ziolkowski envisioned it.
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CLAIM
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Jul 19, 2026
Major public art projects require transparent governance structures that include affected communities in core decisions, whether or not they proceed.
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CLAIM
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Jul 19, 2026
The Crazy Horse monument risks commodifying Indigenous culture for commercial gains.
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CLAIM
Posted by admin
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Jul 19, 2026
The Crazy Horse monument oversimplifies complex Indigenous histories into a single narrative.
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CLAIM
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Jul 19, 2026
The artistic vision behind Crazy Horse showcases the profound impact of monumental art on cultural identity.
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