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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
Pomo dance costume
1
2018-03-16T21:08:27-07:00
Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
29482
1
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Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
This page has paths:
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2018-03-16T21:08:24-07:00
Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
Vol. 14 Illustrations
Erik Loyer
1
Media Gallery
structured_gallery
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Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
1
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Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
Pomo
Erik Loyer
1
plain
2018-03-16T21:13:02-07:00
Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
Contents of this path:
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2018-03-16T21:06:46-07:00
Painting on Deerskin
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Painting on brain tanned deerskin. The skin is an off white/grayish color. The paintings on the skin are yellow, brown, white, blue, green, black, orange and red. Various figures are painted on the skin which include, moons, equal sided crosses or "x", 3 anthropomorphic figures, one human head, a bird, and circles. There is a zig zag design the goes around the perimeter of the skin. There is a 1 cm wide hole in the skin in the lower left quadrant. The edges of the skin are fairly straight and smooth, indicating it was cut/trimmed to a roughly rectangular shape. The hide painting appears to be the same one illustrated in "Sacred buckskin - Apache", plate facing page 31, in The North American Indian (1907-1930) v.01, The Apache. The Jicarillas. The Navaho ([Seattle] : E.S. Curtis ; [Cambridge, Mass. : The University Press], 1907. See pp. 29-35 for explanatory text, where it is identified as a medicine skin formerly owned by Navajo medicine man Hashke Nilnte, and acquired by Curtis from Hashke Nilnte's wife. The symbolism is then outlined in detail in the publication.View this plate online here: http://curtis.library.northwestern.edu/curtis/viewPage.cgi?showp=1&size=2&id=nai.01.book.00000074.p&volume=1#nav .
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Old "Ukiah" - Pomo
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The Pomo formerly occupied about half the area of Mendocino, Sonoma, and Lake counties, besides a small isolated territory in Glenn and Colusa. The survivors are found in greatest number in the vicinity of the town of Ukiah. This name, though it is applied to the original portrait as a nickname, is a word of Pomo origin, from yo, south, and kaia, valley.
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2018-03-16T21:12:22-07:00
Hunter - Lake Pomo
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The scene is Clear lake. The abundant tules along its shallows formerly supplied the natives with material for house-coverings, mats, garments, and balsas, and sheltered teeming flocks of waterfowl.
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Burden-basket - Pomo
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With her basket supported bya tump-line passing across her head, and with seed-beater in hand, this capable matron is ready for a day in the fields harvesting wild seeds, which she will parch and crush into a nutritious and appetizing meal known by the Mexican name pinole.
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Mixed-blood Coast Pomo
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Shatila - Pomo
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Summer camp - Lake Pomo
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Except that it was larger and rather more substantial, the winter house of the Lake Pomo was identical with its tule-covered framework of willow poles.
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Wild grapes - Pomo
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Gathering tules - Lake Pomo
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The round-stem tule, Scirpus lacustris, was used principally for thatching houses, for making mats by stringing them laterally on parallel cords, and, securely lashed together in long bundles, in the construction of serviceable and quickly made canoes.
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Pomo girl
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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
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Coast Pomo woman
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Pomo seed-gathering utensils
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The group includes a tight-mesh burden-basket for seeds, an open-mesh burden-basket for acorns and other nuts, two winnowing trays, and a seed-beater with which the seeds are brushed from the plant into the burden-basket.
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Pomo baskets, mortar, and pestle
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Coast Pomo girl
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Fishing camp - Lake Pomo
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Large quantities of species locally called black-fish are still taken annually by the Lake Pomo. The fish are split down the back, and after the removal of backbone, head, and entrails, are hung on pole racks to dry in the sun for about two weeks, after which they are thoroughly cured in smoke-houses. Tule huts are not now seen, the one here shown having been built especially for the occasion.
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Aged Pomo woman
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Canoe of tules - Pomo
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In an emergency a craft even more simple than this was made by fashioning a long bundle of tules, which the boatman rode astride with his legs in the water.
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Construction of a tule shelter - Lake Pomo
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Sherwood Valley girl - Pomo
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A mixed-blood Coast Pomo
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A Coast Pomo man
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Koshonono - Pomo
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An eastern Pomo
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A Pomo camp
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A Pomo girl
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A Coast Pomo
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Eastern Pomo woman
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In the tule swamp - Lake Pomo
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Pomo baskets
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Pomo baskets and magnesite beads
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Cooking acorns - Lake Pomo
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Conception rock near Ukiah - Pomo
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Basket used in puberty rites - Pomo
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Pomo dance costume
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A summer camp - Lake Pomo
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On Russian River - Pomo
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Summer shelter - Lake Pomo
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Coast Pomo with feather head-dress
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Coast Pomo bridal costume
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Gathering tules - Lake Pomo
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Gathering seeds - Coast Pomo
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Camp under the oaks - Lake Pomo
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Pomo mother and child
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Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
"Dance"
Erik Loyer
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Erik Loyer
f862727c4b34febd6a0341bffd27f168a35aa637
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Woven Sash
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Woven sash; dance sash form though only 1/2 of such a sash is present. Natural ivory/tan background. One end brocaded with geometric diamond and zigzag pattern with the colors of red, black, faded green, and purple; brocaded end has fringe.
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Bear Song, Winter Dance
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wax cylinder recording of Nane song
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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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Arikara medicine ceremony - Dance of the fraternity
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After each order has performed its dance about the sacred cedar, the entire fraternity, group by group, emerges from the lodge and dances.
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Arikara medicine ceremony - Dance of the black-tail deer
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The two dark figures are painted in a manner suggesting the elk, the others the antelope.
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Arikara medicine ceremony - The Ducks
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Three members of the medicine fraternity, painted to represent ducks and holding the rushes among which waterfowl rest, in their dance around the sacred cedar.
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Sun dance encampment - Piegan
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This tribal assembly for the Sun Dance of 1898 comprised about two hundred and thirty tipis, including a number of visiting Blackfeet and Bloods from Canada. The scene is on the Piegan reservation in northern Montana, near Browning.
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Grizzly-bear brave - Piegan
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At least two of the Piegan Warrior societies (the Braves and the All Brave Dogs) included in their membership two men known as Grizzly-bear Braves. It was their duty, at the time of the society dances, to provide their comrades with meat, which they appropriated wherever they could find it. Their expression and demeanor did justice to their name, and in their official capacity they were generally feared by the people. See Volume VI, pages 20-21.
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Bringing the sweat-lodge willows - Piegan
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Young horseman are coming toward the Sun-dance encampment with willows for the faster's sweat-lodge, as described in Volume VI, page 43.
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Porcupine - Cheyenne
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At the summer gatherings for such occasions as the Sun Dance, the men sometimes protect their heads from the merciless sun by a thatch of cottonwood leaves.
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Flathead chief
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Through the medium of their annual incursions into the buffalo plains east of the Rocky mountains, the Flatheads adopted much of the plains culture. Not only their domicile (the tipi), their garments, weapons, and articles of adornment, came from this source, but many of their dances were in imitation of similar ceremonies practised by the prairie tribes. Prominent features of the accoutrement of this Flathead chief are his war-club of the plains type, and an eagle-bone whistle, such as was used in the Sun Dance. The Flatheads however never acquired the sun rite
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Flathead dance
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Eliminating the environment, one would suppose that a party of plains Indians were performing. The costumes, the step, the gesture, the character of songs, all evidence of the Flathead war-dance.
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Masked dancer - Cowichan
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The dancer personates one of the mythic ancestors who descended from the sky. Note the huge, carved house-post at the right.
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Kotsuis and Hohhuq - Nakoaktok
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These two masked performers in the winter dance represent huge, mythical birds. Kotsuis (the Nakoaktok equivalent of the Qagyuhl Kaloqutsuis) and Hohhuq are servitors in the house of the man-eating monster Pahpaqalanohsiwi. See page 160. The mandibles of these tremendous wooden masks are controlled by strings.
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Coming for the bride
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In the bow qunhulahl, a masked man personating the thunderbird, dances with characteristic gestures as the canoe approaches the bride's village.
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Wedding party - Qagyuhl
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After the wedding ceremony at the bride's village the party returns to the husband's home. The newly married pair stand on a painted "bride's seat" in the stern of the canoe, and the bridegroom's sister or other relative, dances on a platform in the bow, while the men sing and rhythmically thump the canoes with the handles of their paddles.
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Group of winter dancers - Qagyuhl
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Nimkish village at Alert Bay
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The figure at the bottom of the column in the foreground, with the painting on the front of the house, represents a raven. When a feast or a dance is to be held in this house, the guests enter through the raven's beak, the lower mandible of which swings up and down on a pivot. When a guest steps beyond the pivot, his weight caused the beak to clap shut, and thus the mythic raven symbolically "swallows" the tribesman one by one. A view from the other end of this street is shown in the illustration facing page 8, Volume X.
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Masked dancers in canoes - Qagyhl, A
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Visitors approaching a village where the winter dance is in progress sometimes array themselves in their ceremonial costumes, and dance while the canoes slowly move shoreward. From left to right the dancers represent respectively Wasp, Thunderbird, and Grizzly-bear.
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Dancing to restore an eclipsed moon - Qagyuhl
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It is thought that an eclipse is the result of an attempt of some creature in the sky to swallow the luminary. In order to compel the monster to disgorge it, the people dance round a smoldering fire of old clothing and hair, the stench of which, rising to his nostrils, is expected to cause him to sneeze and disgorge the moon.
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Masked dancers - Qagyuhl
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The plate shows a group of masked and costumed performers in the winter ceremony. The chief who is holding the dance stands at the left, grasping a speaker's staff and wearing cedar-bark neck-ring and head-band and a few of the spectators are visible at the right. At the extreme left is seen a part of the painted mawihl through which the dancers emerge from the secret room; and in the centre, between the carved house-posts, is the Awaitlala hams'pek, showing three of the five mouths through which the hamatsa wriggle from the top to the bottom of the column. See page 175 and footnote.
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Bridal group
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The bride stands in the middle between two dancers hired for the occasion. Her father is at the left, and the bridegroom's father at the right behind a man who presides over the box-drum.
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Masked dancers in canoes - Qagyuhl, B
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Buffalo dance at Hano
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The Buffalo dance at the Upper Rio Grande pueblos was lately introduced among the Hopi, who attach no religious significance to it.
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Antelopes and snakes at Oraibi
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The Antelope fraternity, at the right, and the Snake fraternity facing them at the left, engage in singing prior to handling the reptiles in the Snake dance. At the extreme right is the kisi, a cottonwood booth in which sits the custodian of the snake-jars, ready to hand out the reptiles one by one to the dancers.
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Watching the dancers
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A group of girls on the topmost roof of Walpi, looking down into the plaza.
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Honovi - Walpi snake priest, with Totokya Day painting
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This plate depicts the accoutrement of a Snake dancer on the day of the Antelope dance (see Volume XII, pages 146-149). The right hand grasps a pair of eagle-feathers - the "snake whip" - and the left a bag of ceremonial meal. Honovi was one of the author's principal informants.
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Snake priest
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The white markings, typifying the antelope, indicate that the subject is accoutred for the semi-final day of the Snake dance, when the public performance consists of the dance and the ceremonial race of the Antelope fraternity.
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Snake dancers entering the plaza
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At the right stand the Antelopes, in front of the booth containing the snake-jars. The Snakes enter the plaza, encircle it four times with military tread, and then after a series of songs remarkable for their irresistible movement, they proceed to dance with the reptiles.
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Snake dancer in costume
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Flute dancers at Tureva Spring
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The Flute dance is a religious ceremony concerned with bringing rain. It represents the legendary arrival of the Flute people in the Hopi country, their friendly encounter with the clans already there, and the rain-making rites subsequently performed by them for the common good. The episode here represented was photographed at Middle mesa. The individual seated near the right end is an albino, not a white man.
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Hupa jumping dance costume
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The Jumping dance was an annual ceremony for averting pestilence. The head-dress worn by the dancers was a wide band of deerskin with rows of red woodpecker crests and a narrow edging of white deer-hair sewn on it. A deerskin robe was worn as a kilt, and each performer displayed all the shells and beads he possessed or could borrow. In the right hand was carried a straw-stuffed cylinder with a slit-like opening from end to end, an object the significance of which is unknown to the modern Hupa.
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Klamath lake marshes
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Fairly extensive marshes occur along the shores of Klamath lake, and Klamath marsh covers about a hundred square miles. These areas are the resort of innumerable waterfowl, which were of great importance to the aboriginal Klamath, and thousands of acres were a mass of water-lilies, which yielded in abundance an edible seed.
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Sia buffalo dancer
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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.
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Tablita dancers and singers - San Ildefonso
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The ceremony called Koheye-hyare ("tablita dance"), occurring in June and again in September, is characterized by public dancing and singing for the purpose of bringing rain-clouds. The name refers to wooden "tablets" worn by female dancers. (See Volume XVII, illustrations facing pages 56,60,62,64,66,68.) In the plate the performers are dancing in to the plaza, men and women alternating in pairs. At the right is the group of singers, their aged leader slightly in advance and the drummer at one side.
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Tesuque buffalo dancers
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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.
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Corner of Zuni
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The chamber at the left, with ladder-poles projecting from the hatchway, is the kiva of the north. Many dances are performed in the small plaza here shown. The dark material piled against one of the houses is sheep-dung for firing pottery.
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Cheyenne sun-dance lodge
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For an account of the Sun-dance ceremony and the erection of the lodge among the Southern Cheyenne, see Volume XIX, pages 121-128.
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Hotamitaye Society, Cheyenne sun-dance
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The members of this and other bands, which were created by the Prophet of Cheyenne legend, go to the forest for the poles with which to build the lodge. While in the forest they decorate themselves and their horses with willow branches, leaving the rearmost horsemen to drag the poles to camp.
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Water rite purification, Cheyenne animal dance
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The legend of the Animal dance is given on pages 133-135 of Volume XIX.
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At the pool, animal dance - Cheyenne
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Yebichai dancers - Navaho
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The sun dancer - Apsaroke
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The sun dance votary - Apsaroke
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Buffalo dance costume - Mandan
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Ready for Okipe buffalo dance - Mandan
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Buffalo dancer - Mandan
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Atsina scalp dance
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Atsina fly dance
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Atsina fly dance : "Robes outstretched"
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Atsina crazy dance : A dancer kisses the grandfather
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Atsina crazy dance : The flight of arrows
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Atsina crazy dancers
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Singing in the crazy dance - Atsina
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Piegan dancers
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Sun dance pledgers - Cheyenne
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Crazy dancers - Cheyenne
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Animal dance - Cheyenne
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Sun dance in progress - Cheyenne
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A dance in the forest - Flathead
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Masked dancer - Cowichan
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Grizzly-bear dancer - Qagyuhl
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An incident of the winter dance - Nakoaktok
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Sisiutl dancer - Qagyuhl
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Spectators at the snake dance
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Snake dancer and "hugger"
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Oraibi snake dance
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Flute dancers dressing at Kuchina house
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Flute dancers approaching the spring
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Entering the spring, Walpi flute dance
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Offering sacred meal, Mishongnovi flute dance
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Buffalo dance at Hano
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Flute dancers returning to Walpi
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White deerskin dance costume - Hupa
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Dancer with black deer effigy - Hupa
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Obsidian bearer, White deerskin dance - Hupa
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Pomo dance costume
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Picuris harvest dance
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Sia war-dancer
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Good luck dance by San Juan hunters
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Tewa dance - costume
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Eagle dancer - San Ildefonso
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Tablita woman dancer - San Ildefonso
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Tablita dance - San Ildefonso - A
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Tablita dance - San Ildefonso - B
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Tablita dance - San Ildefonso - C
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Tablita dancers returning to the kiva - San Ildefonso
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Tablita dancers at the kiva - San Ildefonso
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Tablita dancers - San Ildefonso
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Frame of the sponsor's tipi, Cree sun-dance
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The dance - Wichita
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Dancers - Wichita
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A Wichita dancer
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Skidi and Wichita dancers
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Modern dance costume - Pawnee
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Chiefs in the sun dance parade - Cheyenne
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Hivihhnihpoih Society, Cheyenne sun dance
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Hefatyu Society, Cheyenne sun dance
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Preparatory lodge, Cheyenne sun dance
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Sun dance lodge - Cheyenne
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Interior of sun dance lodge - Cheyenne
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Sun dancers - Cheyenne
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Buffalo society, animal dance - Cheyenne
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Buffalo dancers, animal dance - Cheyenne
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Animal dance - Cheyenne
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Brush huts, animal dance encampment - Cheyenne
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The clowns, animal dance - Cheyenne
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The wolf, animal dance - Cheyenne
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Deer society, animal dance - Cheyenne
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Healing rite of the Deer society, animal dance - Cheyenne
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A Ponca dancer
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Curtis and His Collaborators
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part of Contextualizing Curtis
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2018-03-16T21:06:56-07:00
Grass Dance - Atsina Gros Ventres
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wax cylinder recording of an Atsina Gros Ventres song
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Seven Girl Dance Sung in Plaza
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wax cylinder recording of Tesque song
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Seven Girl Dance When Woman Whips
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wax cylinder recording of Tesuque song
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Snake Dance - Nambe Pueblo
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wax cylinder recording of song from Nambe Pueblo
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2018-03-16T21:06:57-07:00
Squaw Dance - Atsina Gros Ventres
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wax cylinder recording of Atsina Gros Ventres song
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2018-03-16T21:12:51-07:00
The Hopi Maiden and Watching the Dancers
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part of Visualizing the "Vanishing Race"
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Chief Josef –Nez Perce
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Page 2 of Visualizing the "Vanishing Race"
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2018-03-16T21:11:03-07:00
Vanishing Race and Cañon de Chelly
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Page 3 of Visualizing the "Vanishing Race"
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2018-03-16T21:12:51-07:00
Upshaw – Apsaroke
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part of Visualizing the "Vanishing Race"
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At the Old Well and A Zuni Woman
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part of Visualizing the "Vanishing Race"
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Princess Angeline
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Page 1 of Visualizing the "Vanishing Race" path
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Watching the Dancers
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Photogravure titled . “Watching the Dancers”, 1906, volume 12, portfolio plate 405, The North American Indian
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