"Indian in Moonlight" is an example of Couse's most enduring and acclaimed type of subject - the nocturnal scene. A lone figure, bathed in moonlight, sits perched with splashes of color showing through in his moccasins and waist area. Couse frequently preferred to show subjects in this nocturnal setting, and was a master of the moonlight tones, much like other contemporaries of his, such as Frederic Remington. Eanger Irving Couse was reared in Saginaw, Michigan, and after stints in New York and France, he joined many other artists in Taos, who applied their avant garde techniques to the Native American subject. Taos was perceived as one of the last areas remaining somewhat untainted by Western exapansion. Along with Cincinnati-born artist Joseph Henry Sharp (1859-1953), and others, Couse was a founding member of the Taos Society of Artists, one of the most important artistic movements of the early 20th century. Couse excelled at subjects of the Native American in camp, nocturnal, and interior settings.
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