Cayton Wagner Art

Cayton Wagner Art Aspiring Ceramicist, Jewelry maker, Painter and Photographer! Feel encouraged to message me if seeki

Spring means planters! 🪴🪴                                #303  #719
04/24/2025

Spring means planters! 🪴🪴 #303 #719

More oil bottles to come!                                      #303  #719
03/31/2025

More oil bottles to come! #303 #719

Medium Decorative Vases! For sale in my tattoo studio!                                  #303  #719
03/28/2025

Medium Decorative Vases! For sale in my tattoo studio! #303 #719

Some large Bowls from the end of 2024
02/04/2025

Some large Bowls from the end of 2024

Some of the tattoo flash I have drawn up this year. For my tattoos see                           #303  #719
11/14/2024

Some of the tattoo flash I have drawn up this year. For my tattoos see #303 #719

Gorgeous planters!
10/06/2024

Gorgeous planters!

Mug shots
01/20/2024

Mug shots

Trying to do more color tattoos! Also willing to do these in black and grey! $120 each
01/18/2024

Trying to do more color tattoos! Also willing to do these in black and grey! $120 each

Swipe to see this beauty on skin!                            #303  #719
01/13/2024

Swipe to see this beauty on skin! #303 #719

Some cute little bottles for spices, herbs, oils or decoration!                                  #719  #303
12/29/2023

Some cute little bottles for spices, herbs, oils or decoration! #719 #303

11/11/2023

THERE WERE FEMALE WARRIORS TOO:
Shown here is Moving Robe Woman, a Hunkpapa (Sitting Bull's branch of the Sioux).
INSP explains:
Moving Robe Woman was no stranger to battle. At age 17, she took part in a war party against the Crow. In July 1876, now at about age 23, she was among the Sioux and Lakota who camped at the Greasy Grass (Little Big Horn). On this fateful day, she was digging turnips when a warrior rode by warning women to take their children to the hills. General Custer was about to attack. Moving Robe Woman raced back to her lodge where she learned that her brother, One Hawk, was killed in an earlier battle with Custer’s men. Now, in deep mourning and fueled by revenge, Moving Robe braided her hair, painted her face red, mounted her horse, and with her brother’s war staff in hand, galloped into battle. “I was a woman,” she reportedly said, “But I was not afraid.” Her determination emboldened the male warriors to fight ferociously for their way of life, in what would end up an overwhelming victory for the Native Americans. Custer’s entire cavalry, 268 men, himself included, were killed—at least one at the hands of Moving Robe. She may have gotten her vengeance, but it was bitter, and it came at a cost. She later said, “[No one] staged a victory dance that night. They were mourning their own dead.” Moving Robe Woman died in 1935 at Standing Rock Reservation in South Dakota. She was about 81 years old.

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Pueblo, CO
81001-81012

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