The paintings of Elbridge Ayer Burbank (1858Ì¢ âÂ'1949) were admired in his lifetime, especially but not exclusively by the anthropological community of collectors and museum professionals who valued 'accuracy' and believed that Burbank delivered it, first in his paintings of African Americans produced between 1892 and 1897 and later in his oil paintings and red crayon drawings of American Indians. This paper will explore Burbank's quest to represent the 'authentic' Indian and the transformation of that quest as he moved from the medium of oil paint to the medium of red crayon. Burbank's paintings emphasize his preoccupation with authenticity at the outset of his project. The red drawings, on the other hand, suggest how Burbank used the concept of hybridity, the mixture of heterogeneous elements, in an attempt to reconcile his quest for a single authentic Indianness with his discovery of diverse individual Indians on reservations.