| Native American Indian Photos |
|
Index of Native American Indian Photographs
a baby apsaroke 1908
a bear tote matmassett 1915
a beaver bundle blackfoot 1926
a begged-from cedar 1914
a blackfoot 1926
a blackfoot ceremonial bag 1926
a blackfoot soldier 1926
a black foot tipi 1926
a blackfoot woman 1926
a blood horseman 1926
a boulder milling-stone miwok 1924
a buffalo-fall piegan 1911
a burial platform apsaroke 1908
a cahuilla child 1924
a campo female type diegueno 1924
a capitan grande mandigueno 1924
a capitan grande woman digueno 1924
a catcher picking up a snake 1906
a cave at middle mesa 1921
a cheyenne peyote leader 1927
a chief chukchansi yokuts 1924
a chiefs son assiniboin 1926
a childs lodge piegan 1910
a chipewyan tent 1926
a chipewyan woman 1926
a chomawi man 1923
a chomawi matron 1923
a chomawi mother and child 1923
a chomawi summer hut 1923
a chomawi woman 1923
a chukchansi head-man 1924
a chukchansi matron 1924
a chukchansi woman 1924
a chukchansi woman profile 1924
a chukchansi yokuts 1924
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
XXXX
Photos by Edward S. Curtis
Edward S. Curtis (1868-1952) is one of the best-known photographers of Native Americans. He devoted 30 years during the beginning of the 20th century to documenting the customs and lifestyle of more than 80 Native American tribes. Through his photography, he captured the beauty and intricacies of Indian life.
The North American Indian by Edward S. Curtis is one of the most significant and controversial representations of traditional American Indian culture ever produced. Issued in a limited edition from 1907-1930, the publication continues to exert a major influence on the image of Indians in popular culture. Curtis said he wanted to document "the old time Indian, his dress, his ceremonies, his life and manners." In over 2000 photogravure plates and narrative, Curtis portrayed the traditional customs and lifeways of eighty Indian tribes. The twenty volumes, each with an accompanying portfolio, are organized by tribes and culture areas encompassing the Great Plains, Great Basin, Plateau Region, Southwest, California, Pacific Northwest, and Alaska.
- from The United States Library of Congress
|
|
|