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Native Nations: First North Americans as…
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Native Nations: First North Americans as Seen by Edward Curtis (original 1993; edition 1993)

by Edward S. Curtis (Author)

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Just after the turn of the century Edward Curtis set out to photograph and document the Indians of Northern America. This book contains 125 of his best photographs, which together with text, provides a view of the emotional and spirital lives of the indiginous North Americans of that period.
Member:BenKrywosz
Title:Native Nations: First North Americans as Seen by Edward Curtis
Authors:Edward S. Curtis (Author)
Info:Bulfinch (1993), Edition: 1st, 160 pages
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Native Nations: First North Americans as Seen by Edward S. Curtis by Edward S. Curtis (1993)

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Although we know that Edward S. Curtis had no qualms about staging scenes and manipulating his subjects in order to tell his special story (a noble race of people who were rapidly riding down the trail of oblivion), it is impossible to view these photos without becoming fascinated and, ultimately, taken in. In part, this is because of Curtis’ technical skill. A photographic devotee from his teenage years, Curtis was a master of the photogravure method, and his choice of sepia matched perfectly the elegiac nature of his project. The book itself is a handsome production, something of a composite of other publications in the “native nations” series. My favorite pictures are of the masks. These startling creations tend to resist the romanticizing element in much of Curtis’ work. They give the viewer a striking sense of the “otherness” of native culture. These images are more comprehensively collected in another volume of the series titled Hidden Faces. ( )
  jburlinson | Oct 1, 2008 |
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Edward Sheriff Curtis achieved the impossible.  (Editor's note, Christopher Cardozo)
In Mr. Curtis we have both an artist and a trained observer, whose pictures are pictures, not merely photographs; whose work has far more than mere accuracy, because it is truthful.  (Roosevelt on Curtis, Theodore Roosevelt)
Moving northward in my trusty Indian Bronco, we traverse through swarms of winter snow snakes as they wind their icy way across the lonely ribbon of asphalt.  (Foreword, George P. Horse Capture)
The task of recording the descriptive material embodied in this volume, and of preparing the photographs that accompany them, had its inception in 1898.  (Introduction, Edward S. Curtis)
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Just after the turn of the century Edward Curtis set out to photograph and document the Indians of Northern America. This book contains 125 of his best photographs, which together with text, provides a view of the emotional and spirital lives of the indiginous North Americans of that period.

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