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Performing Archive
Main Menu
Visualizing the “Vanishing Race”: the photogravures of Edward S. Curtis
Front Page for Visualizing the "Vanishing Race" path
Curtis' Image and Life: The Network of The North American Indian, Inc.
An experiment with data visualization approach to understand and contextualize Curtis' images and his life
Media, Technology and Mediations
Curtis's Technology, Relationships to Media and Style
Contextualizing Curtis, The North American Indian, and Race
the collection of essays from the contributors
Consulting with Tribes as Part of Archive Development
Introduction to Consulting with Tribes by Ulia Gosart
Contributing Archives
Information on how to participate in Performing Archive
Browsing the Media
A path of paths that allow users to cut through the collection in a variety of ways.
Acknowledgements and Project Information
Project Network
Jacqueline Wernimont
bce78f60db1628727fc0b905ad2512506798cac8
David J. Kim
18723eee6e5a79c8d8823c02b7b02cb2319ee0f1
Stephan Schonberg
23744229577bdc62e9a8c09d3492541be754e1ef
Amy Borsuk
c533a79d33d48cbf428e1160c2edc0b38c50db19
Beatrice Schuster
a02047525b31e94c1336b01e99d7f4f758870500
Heather Blackmore
d0a2bf9f2053b3c0505d20108092251fc75010bf
Ulia Gosart (Popova)
67c984897e6357dbeeac6a13141c0defe5ef3403
Ogalala girls
1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
29482
1
As a rule the women of the plains tribes are natural horsewomen, and their skill in riding is scarcely exceeded by that of the men. As mere infants they are tied upon the backs of trusty animals, and thus become accustomed to the long days of journeying.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
This page has paths:
1
2018-03-16T21:12:54-07:00
Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
"Girl"
Erik Loyer
1
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:54-07:00
Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
Contents of this path:
1
2018-03-16T21:06:59-07:00
Sigesh - Apache
1
This illustrates the girls' method of tying the hair previous to marriage. The ornament fastened to the hair in the back is made of leather, broad and round at the ends and narrow in the middle.
plain
2018-03-16T21:06:59-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:07:00-07:00
Apache Nalin
1
An Apache girl about fourteen years of age.
plain
2018-03-16T21:07:00-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:22-07:00
Qahatika water girl
1
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:22-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:22-07:00
Qahatika girl
1
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:22-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:24-07:00
Mosa - Mohave
1
It would be difficult to conceive of a more aboriginal than this Mohave girl. Her eyes are those of the fawn of the forest, questioning the strange things of civilization upon which it gazes for the first time. She is such a type as Father Garces may have viewed on his journey through the Mohave country in 1776.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:24-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:24-07:00
Hwalya - Yuma
1
A Yuma girl, characteristic of southern Yuman maidenhood.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:24-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:24-07:00
Maricopa girl
1
The young Maricopa women affect the Mexican more than the Indian dress; but they are by no means unpicturesque in their garb of many colors as they gracefully bear their burden on their heads.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:24-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Ogalala girls
1
As a rule the women of the plains tribes are natural horsewomen, and their skill in riding is scarcely exceeded by that of the men. As mere infants they are tied upon the backs of trusty animals, and thus become accustomed to the long days of journeying.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Sioux girl
1
A young Sioux woman in a dress made entirely of deerskin, embroidered with beads and porcupine-quills.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:07:12-07:00
Arikara girl
1
A type produced by several generations of tribal and racial intermarriage. The subject is considered by her tribesmen to be a pure Arikara, but her features point unmistakably to a white ancestor, and there is little doubt that the blood of other tribes than the one which claims her flows in her veins.
plain
2018-03-16T21:07:12-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:08-07:00
Cheyenne girl
1
plain
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1
2018-03-16T21:11:43-07:00
Mountain camp - Yakima
1
The reservation of the Yakima rises from the level of the valley of the Yakima river to the lower range of mountains between that stream and the Columbia. In the glades of the mountains small parties pitch their tipis in the spring-time, and the women and girls gather edible roots, notably bitterroot.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:44-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:50-07:00
Nespilim girl
1
In the early years of the nineteenth century various explorers noted that the bands dwelling along the upper course of the Columbia, among which the Nespilim were included, wore practically no clothing. Excepting as the cold made some protection necessary. The hair of the women was arranged in two knots at the sides of the face ? a method of hairdressing still in vogue among the Salish on Fraser river. Prior to the middle of the century the use of deerskin garments had become common, and gradually other customs such as the style of hairdressing here illustrated, were borrowed from the tribes east of the Rocky mountains
plain
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1
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Kutenai girls
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1
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Fisherman - Wishham
1
Among the middle course of the Columbia at places where the abruptness of the shore and the up-stream set of an eddy make such method possible, salmon were taken, and still are taken, by means of a long-hauled dip-net. At favorable seasons a man will, in a few hours, secure several hundred salmon - as many as the matrons and girls of his household can care for in a day.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:53-07:00
1
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Wishham girl
1
The subject is clothed in a heavily beaded deerskin dress of the plains type. The throat is encircled by strands of shell beads of native manufacture, heirlooms which were obtained by the original Wishham possessor from the Pacific slope. Pendant on the breast are strands of larger beads of the same kind, as well as of various kinds brought into the country by the traders of the Hudson's Bay Company. An indispensable ornament of the well-born person was the dentalium-shell thrust through a perforation in the nasal septum; occasionally, as in this case, two such shells were connected by means of a bit of wood pushed into the hollow bases. Tied to the hair at each side of the face (see the following plate) is another dentalium-shell ornament, which is in reality an ear pendant transferred from the lobe of the ear (where its weight would be inconvenient) to the hair. The head-dress consists of shells, shell beads, commercial beads, and Chinese coins. The coins made their appearance in the Columbia River region at a comparatively early date. This form of head-dress was worn on special occasions by girls between the age of puberty and their marriage.
plain
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1
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Wishham girl, profile
1
plain
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1
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Wishham maid
1
Clad in her deerskin dress of the plains and her basketry hat of the coast, the girl pauses on the grim lava rocks above the Dalles, looking out across the thundering rapids, perhaps observing the activities after friends in the village Wasko.
plain
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1
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Suquamish girl
1
plain
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1
2018-03-16T21:11:16-07:00
Cowichan girl
1
A maiden of noble birth clad in goat-hair robe.
plain
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1
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Clayoquot girl
1
plain
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1
2018-03-16T21:11:06-07:00
Hesquiat maiden
1
The girl wears the cedar-bark ornaments that are tied to the hair of virgins on the fifth morning of their puberty ceremony, as described in Volume XI, page 42. The fact that the girl who posed for this picture was the prospective mother of an illegitimate child caused considerable amusement to the native onlookers and to herself.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:06-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:12:12-07:00
Loitering at the spring
1
A group of Walpi and Hano girls in holiday attire. The background is a typical bit of Southwestern desert.
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:12-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:12:12-07:00
Tewa girl
1
An excellent feminine type of these early immigrants from the Rio Grande. The arrangement of her hair suggests that she is unmarried.
plain
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1
2018-03-16T21:12:12-07:00
Watching the dancers
1
A group of girls on the topmost roof of Walpi, looking down into the plaza.
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:12-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:12:12-07:00
Hopi girl
1
Soft, regular features are characteristic of Hopi young women, and no small part of a mother's time is used to be devoted to dressing the hair of her unmarried daughters. The aboriginal style is rapidly being abandoned, and the native one-piece dress here illustrated is seldom seen even at the less advanced of the Hopi pueblos.
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:13-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:12:15-07:00
East mesa girls
1
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:15-07:00
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Tewa girls
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plain
2018-03-16T21:12:16-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:12:22-07:00
Pomo girl
1
Clam-shell beads of the kind here shown are still made by some of the old men. Fragments of shell are pierced and strung on a stem of the scouring-rush (Equisetum), which is then drawn backward and forward on a flat surface of sandstone until the fragments have become nearly circular. The feathered ornament is an ear-pendant, which in this case, because of its length and weight, is attached to a strand of hair. The large, dark-colored bead on one strand of the necklace is a cylinder of magnesite, a highly valued object
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:22-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:12:23-07:00
Coast Pomo girl
1
plain
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1
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Taos water girls
1
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:29-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:15-07:00
Ti'mu - Cochiti
1
This Cochiti girl married a Sia man, and the photograph was made at her adopted home.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:15-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:12:31-07:00
Sia buffalo dancer
1
The Buffalo dance of the Keres is almost exactly the same as that of the Tewa. The performers are two young men with head-dresses of buffalo-hair and horns, and a girl wearing the usual female costume and a pair of small horns. The head of the hunters' society plays the part of guard. The dance is very strenuous, and the simulated actions of t he buffalo are quite realistic and readily comprehended by the spectator.
plain
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2018-03-16T21:06:50-07:00
Acoma water girls
1
plain
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1
2018-03-16T21:12:32-07:00
Povi-Tamu
1
The flower concept is a favorite one in Tewa names, both masculine and feminine. The regular features of the comely Morning Flower are not exceptional, for most Tewa girls, and indeed most Pueblo girls, are not without attractiveness.
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:32-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:12:33-07:00
Girl and jar - San Ildefonso
1
Pueblo women are adept at balancing burdens on the head. Usually a vessel rests on a fibre ring, which serves to steady it and to protect the scalp. The design on the jar here illustrated recalls the importance of the serpent cult in Tewa life. (See Volume XVII, pages 19-24, 77-80.)
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:33-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:12:34-07:00
Tesuque buffalo dancers
1
The Buffalo dance is performed, though the original object of exerting prenatural influence on the abundance and accessibility of the buffalo no longer prevails. The two male dancers are accompanied by the Buffalo Girl, who is fully clothed in native costume and has a pair of small horns on the head. These three give a very striking and dramatic performance under the watchful eye of the head of the hunters' society.
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:35-07:00
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2018-03-16T21:12:36-07:00
Zuni girls at the river
1
plain
2018-03-16T21:12:36-07:00
1
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Zuni girl
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Apache girl
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1
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Yuma girl
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1
2018-03-16T21:09:27-07:00
Sholya - Mohave girl
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1
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Yaqui girl
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1
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Maricopa water girl
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Mandan girl
1
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1
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Piegan girls
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Arapaho water girl
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Young Kalispel girl
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1
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Kutenai girls at the lake-shore
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1
2018-03-16T21:10:39-07:00
Nez Perce girl
1
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2018-03-16T21:10:39-07:00
1
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Umatilla girl
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Cayuse girl
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2018-03-16T21:10:41-07:00
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Wishham girls
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1
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Quinault girl
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1
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Quilliute girl
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Tsawatenok girl
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Hesquiat girl in cedar-bark costume
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Hano and Walpi girls wearing atoo
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2018-03-16T21:08:13-07:00
An East Mesa girl.
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1
2018-03-16T21:08:25-07:00
Sherwood Valley girl - Pomo
1
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1
2018-03-16T21:08:26-07:00
A Pomo girl
1
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An Isleta girl
1
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A Taos girl
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1
2018-03-16T21:09:03-07:00
Boy and girl columns at Corn Mountain -
1
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2018-03-16T21:09:03-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:09:03-07:00
A Zuñi girl
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2018-03-16T21:09:03-07:00
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A Nambe girl
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2018-03-16T21:09:09-07:00
A Cree girl
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2018-03-16T21:09:09-07:00
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2018-03-16T21:09:21-07:00
A Comanche girl
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Girl's costume, Nunivak
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1
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Diomede girl
1
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1
2018-03-16T21:09:48-07:00
Selawik girl.
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1
2018-03-16T21:13:01-07:00
Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
Ogalala
Erik Loyer
1
plain
2018-03-16T21:13:01-07:00
Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
Contents of this path:
1
2018-03-16T21:11:26-07:00
Ogalala war-party
1
Here is depicted a group of Sioux warriors as they appeared in the days of intertribal warfare, carefully making their way down a hillside in the vicinity of the enemy's camp. Many hold in their hands, instead of weapons, mere sticks adorned with eagle-feathers or scalps - the so-called coup-sticks - desiring to win honor by striking a harmless blow therewith as well as to inflict injury with arrow and bullet.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:26-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:26-07:00
Jack Red Cloud
1
The subject of this portrait is the son of the Ogalala chief Red Cloud. (See No. 103.)
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:26-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:26-07:00
Slow Bull - Ogalala
1
A biographical sketch of this subject is found on page 189 of Volume III.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:26-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:06-07:00
Hukalowapi ceremony
1
The subject of this picture is Saliva, an Ogalala Sioux, a priest of the Hukalowapi ceremony, which is fully described in Volume III, pages 71-87.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:06-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Prayer to the Mystery
1
In supplication the pipe was always offered to the Mystery by holding it aloft. At the feet of the worshipper lies a buffalo-skull, symbolic of the spirit of the animal upon which the Indians were so dependent. The subject of the picture is Picket Pin, an Ogalala Sioux.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Fast Elk
1
A brief sketch of this Ogalala appears on page 184 of Volume III.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Ogalala woman
1
A face so strong that it is almost masculine, showing strikingly how slight may be the difference between the male and female physiognomy in some primitive people.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
In the land of the Sioux
1
This picture illustrates the general character of the Sioux country. The broad, rolling prairie is broken by low hills, while here and there lie pools of stagnant water in old buffalo-wallows. The subjects of the pictures are Red Hawk, Crazy Thunder, and Holy Skin, three Ogalala who accompanied the author on a trip into the Bad Lands.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Ogalala girls
1
As a rule the women of the plains tribes are natural horsewomen, and their skill in riding is scarcely exceeded by that of the men. As mere infants they are tied upon the backs of trusty animals, and thus become accustomed to the long days of journeying.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Planning a raid
1
The Indians, in their striking and characteristic costumes, unconsciously form themselves into most picturesque groups. This shows a party of Ogalala Sioux on a hill overlooking the valley of Wounded Knee creek, on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:28-07:00
Red Cloud - Ogalala
1
A biographical sketch of this well-known chief and celebrated warrior is given n page 187 of Volume III.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:28-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:28-07:00
Crazy Thunder - Ogalala
1
A splendid specimen of the Teton Sioux.
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2018-03-16T21:11:28-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:11:28-07:00
American Horse - Ogalala
1
This subject is one of the four chiefs whose election is described in Volume III, page 16. He died in December, 1908.
plain
2018-03-16T21:11:28-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:09:48-07:00
Calico - Ogalala
1
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2018-03-16T21:09:49-07:00
Shield - Ogalala
1
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2018-03-16T21:09:49-07:00
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2018-03-16T21:09:49-07:00
Stands First - Ogalala
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Good Lance - Ogalala
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2018-03-16T21:09:49-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:09:51-07:00
Iron Plume - Ogalala
1
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2018-03-16T21:09:51-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:09:51-07:00
Struck By Crow - Ogalala
1
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2018-03-16T21:09:51-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:09:53-07:00
Ogalala child
1
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2018-03-16T21:09:53-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:09:53-07:00
Big Road's twin daughters - Ogalala
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2018-03-16T21:09:53-07:00
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2018-03-16T21:09:54-07:00
No Flesh - Ogalala
1
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2018-03-16T21:09:54-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:09:54-07:00
Blue Horse - Ogalala
1
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1
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Returned Scout - Ogalala
1
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1
2018-03-16T21:09:55-07:00
Good Day Woman - Ogalala
1
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1
2018-03-16T21:09:55-07:00
He Crow - Ogalala
1
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2018-03-16T21:09:55-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:09:55-07:00
Kills in Timber - Ogalala
1
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2018-03-16T21:09:55-07:00
1
2018-03-16T21:09:55-07:00
Standing Bear - Ogalala
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Elk Boy - Ogalala
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His Fights - Ogalala
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Eagle Elk - Ogalala
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Fast Thunder - Ogalala
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Red Hawk - Ogalala
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Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
List of Large Plates Supplementing Volume Three
Erik Loyer
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Media Gallery
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Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
Contents of this path:
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Medicine-man
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Invocation and supplication enter so much into the life of the Indian that this picture of the grim old warrior invoking the Mysteries is most characteristic. The subject of the illustration is Slow Bull, whose biography is given in Volume III, page 189.
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Ogalala war-party
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Here is depicted a group of Sioux warriors as they appeared in the days of intertribal warfare, carefully making their way down a hillside in the vicinity of the enemy's camp. Many hold in their hands, instead of weapons, mere sticks adorned with eagle-feathers or scalps - the so-called coup-sticks - desiring to win honor by striking a harmless blow therewith as well as to inflict injury with arrow and bullet.
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2018-03-16T21:11:01-07:00
Two Strike
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A biographical sketch of this Brule chief appears in Volume II, page 190.
plain
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Sioux chiefs
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Very often two or three men would form themselves into a war-party and ride away to be gone weeks or months. Sometimes they returned with scalps or horses, or women ; and again the war-party, whether large or small, met defeat and none survived to bring back to anxious wives and children the story of the disaster.
plain
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1
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Oasis in the Bad Lands
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This picture was made in the heart of the Bad Lands of South Dakota. The subject is the sub-chief Red Hawk, a sketch of whose life is given on page 188 of Volume III.
plain
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Jack Red Cloud
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The subject of this portrait is the son of the Ogalala chief Red Cloud. (See No. 103.)
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Hollow Horn Bear
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The life of this Brule Sioux is briefly treated in Volume III, page 186.
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Sun dancer
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"As they dance, the performers never leave the spot on which they stand, the movement consisting in a slight upward spring from the toes and ball of the foot; legs and body are rigid. Always the right palm is extended to the yellow glaring sun, and their eyes are fixed on its lower rim. The dancer concentrates his mind, his very self, upon the one thing that he desires, whether it be the acquirement of powerful medicine or only success in the next conflict with the enemy." - Volume III, pages 95-96.
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Slow Bull - Ogalala
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A biographical sketch of this subject is found on page 189 of Volume III.
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Brule war-party
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This rhythmic picture shows a party of Brule Sioux re-enacting a raid against the enemy.
plain
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Gray day in the Bad Lands
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Badlands (S.D. and Neb.)
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High Hawk
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The subject is shown in all the finery of a warrior dressed for a gala occasion - scalp-shirt, leggings, moccasins, and pipe-bag, all embroidered with porcupine-quills; eagle-feather war bonnet, and stone-headed war-club from the handle of which dangles a scalp. High Hawk is prominent among the Brules mainly because he is now their leading historical authority, being much in demand to determine the dates of events important to his fellow tribesmen. His calendar, or "winter-count," is explained, and in part reproduced, in Volume III, pages 159-182.
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Prairie chief
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This picture was made on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota at a time when the Indians were assembled in a large encampment, reliving the days of old.
plain
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Little Hawk
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This portrait exhibits the typical Brule physiognomy.
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Hukalowapi ceremony
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The subject of this picture is Saliva, an Ogalala Sioux, a priest of the Hukalowapi ceremony, which is fully described in Volume III, pages 71-87.
plain
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1
2018-03-16T21:11:27-07:00
Prayer to the Mystery
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In supplication the pipe was always offered to the Mystery by holding it aloft. At the feet of the worshipper lies a buffalo-skull, symbolic of the spirit of the animal upon which the Indians were so dependent. The subject of the picture is Picket Pin, an Ogalala Sioux.
plain
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Fast Elk
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A brief sketch of this Ogalala appears on page 184 of Volume III.
plain
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Sioux camp
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It was customary for a war-party to ride in circles about the tipi of their chief before starting on a raid into the country of the enemy.
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Ogalala woman
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A face so strong that it is almost masculine, showing strikingly how slight may be the difference between the male and female physiognomy in some primitive people.
plain
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In the land of the Sioux
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This picture illustrates the general character of the Sioux country. The broad, rolling prairie is broken by low hills, while here and there lie pools of stagnant water in old buffalo-wallows. The subjects of the pictures are Red Hawk, Crazy Thunder, and Holy Skin, three Ogalala who accompanied the author on a trip into the Bad Lands.
plain
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Ogalala girls
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As a rule the women of the plains tribes are natural horsewomen, and their skill in riding is scarcely exceeded by that of the men. As mere infants they are tied upon the backs of trusty animals, and thus become accustomed to the long days of journeying.
plain
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Sioux girl
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A young Sioux woman in a dress made entirely of deerskin, embroidered with beads and porcupine-quills.
plain
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Planning a raid
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The Indians, in their striking and characteristic costumes, unconsciously form themselves into most picturesque groups. This shows a party of Ogalala Sioux on a hill overlooking the valley of Wounded Knee creek, on the Pine Ridge reservation in South Dakota.
plain
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Morning attack
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The favorite moment for attack was just at dawn, when the enemy was presumably unprepared to offer quick resistance.
plain
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Heavy load - Sioux
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Summer and winter the Sioux women performed the heavy work of the camp, and what was seemingly drudgery was to her part of the pleasure of life.
plain
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Black Eagle - Assiniboin
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The life of Black Eagle is briefly treated in Volume III, page 182.
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Mosquito Hawk - Assiniboin
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A biographical sketch of this subject is found in Volume 111, page 187.
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Red Cloud - Ogalala
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A biographical sketch of this well-known chief and celebrated warrior is given n page 187 of Volume III.
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Crazy Thunder - Ogalala
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A splendid specimen of the Teton Sioux.
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Wood gatherer - Sioux
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Fuel for cooking and for warming the tipi was gathered and carried by the women, as a part of their domestic work.
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Winter camp - Sioux
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With the coming of winter the plains tribes pitched their camps in forested valleys, where they not only were protected from the fierce winds of the plains, but had an ample supply of fuel at hand.
plain
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Assiniboin camp
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In making their camps the Indians often chose more picturesque spots.
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American Horse - Ogalala
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This subject is one of the four chiefs whose election is described in Volume III, page 16. He died in December, 1908.
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Invocation - Sioux
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Scattered throughout the Indian country are found spots that are virtually shrines. These are often boulders or other rocks which through some chance have been invested with mythic significance, and to them priest and war-leaders repair to invoke the aid of the supernatural powers. The half-buried bowlder on which the suppliant stands is accredited with the power of revealing to the warrior the foreordained result of his projected raid. Its surface bears what the Indians call the imprint of human feet, and it is owing to this peculiarity that it became a shrine. About it the soil is almost completely worn away by the generations of suppliants who have journeyed hither for divine revelation
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Mountain-sheep hunter - Sioux
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Mountain-sheep, grazing in the most inaccessible parts of the Bad Lands, were sought only by the most ambitious hunters.
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In the Bad Lands
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This striking picture was made at Sheep Mountain in the Bad Lands of Pine Ridge reservation, South Dakota.
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