A visitor to the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame and Museum will find all the things one might expect to see in a place committed to preserving the history of the game: old sticks, photos of iconic players and events, uniforms, equipment and more.
But there’s also something else in the museum that a visitor might be surprised to see: multiple pieces of lacrosse-themed art, including paintings and sculptures. Each piece helps to tell part of the story of lacrosse.
“The art does add a historical perspective, especially since a lot of it revolves around the Native American experience,” said Joe Finn, archivist for US Lacrosse and the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame and Museum.
Those pieces, which include several bronze sculptures donated to the museum by collectors, provide a fairly authentic depiction of the Native lacrosse experience of the 1700s and 1800s. Since photographs from the period were not available, the artistic adaptations help visitors to visualize the game as it was during that time.
“The art in our museum captures the Native dress and equipment reasonably accurately,” Finn said. “Visitors are getting a glimpse of how the game was played and what it looked like.”
The Ball Player, a 36-inch painted bronze sculpture by Mike Call, was donated to the National Lacrosse Hall of Fame and Museum by private collector Robert Mongeluzzi for the museum’s grand re-opening in 2016, along with a second piece by Call that also depicts Native American lacrosse. The Ball Player depicts a Native American lacrosse player with costuming and war paint.