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Alaska's Vanishing Art

Alaska's Vanishing Art
Author: Katharine Kuh
Publisher:
Total Pages: 7
Release: 1966
Genre: Alaska Natives
ISBN:

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Ted Lambert

Ted Lambert
Author: Theodore Roosevelt Lambert
Publisher: University of Alaska Press
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2012-04-15
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1602231656

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Ted Lambert is regarded as one of the premier Alaska artists, a true pioneer. Born in 1905, and raised in the Chicago area, Lambert moved to Alaska in 1925 and went to work as a miner near McCarthy. He held several jobs, predominantly working at a copper mine and mushing dogs—first for adventure, and then as a mail carrier. Lambert left Alaska in 1931 to study art for a year at the American Academy of Art in Chicago, then moved to Seattle, where he began a mentorship under Eustace Ziegler, with whom he traveled throughout Alaska and painted. Eventually Lambert settled down in Fairbanks, where he stayed for twenty years and solidified his reputation as a painter and an artist. But in 1960 he disappeared from the remote cabin he was living in at Bristol Bay. No trace of his body was ever found, but among the effects rescued from his last home was a memoir of his early days in Alaska. Presented here and never before published, these memoirs reveal Lambert to be a keen and intelligent observer and relay the adventure story of a young man who would become one of Alaska’s most important artists.


Alaska Native Art

Alaska Native Art
Author: Susan W. Fair
Publisher: University of Alaska Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2006
Genre: Art
ISBN: 1889963798

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The rich artistic traditions of Alaska Natives are the subject of this landmark volume, which examines the work of the premier Alaska artists of the twentieth century. Ranging across the state from the islands of the Bering Sea to the interior forests, Alaska Native Art provides a living context for beadwork and ivory carving, basketry and skin sewing. Examples of work from Tlingit, Aleutian Islanders, Pacific Eskimo, Athabascan, Yupik, and Inupiaq artists make this volume the most comprehensive study of Alaskan art ever published. Alaska Native Art examines the concept of tradition in the modern world. Alaska Native Art is a volume to treasure, a tribute to the incredible vision of Alaska's artists and to the enduring traditions of all of Alaska's Native peoples.


Alaska's Vanishing Frontier

Alaska's Vanishing Frontier
Author: United States. Congress. House. Interior and Insular Affairs Committee
Publisher:
Total Pages: 96
Release: 1951
Genre:
ISBN:

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Alaska's Vanishing Frontier

Alaska's Vanishing Frontier
Author: United States. Congress. House. Committee on Interior and Insular Affairs
Publisher:
Total Pages: 96
Release: 1951
Genre: Alaska
ISBN:

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Natives of the Far North

Natives of the Far North
Author: Shannon Lowry
Publisher: Stackpole Books
Total Pages: 172
Release: 1994
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780811711029

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The art of photography was still young when Edward Sheriff Curtis joined the Harriman Expedition in 1899. He left home a studio photographer; he returned a zealot with a mission: to document the world of the Natives throughout North America before white settlers destroyed it utterly. This book features the best of Edward Sheriff Curtis's turn-of-the-century Alaska images alongside translations of Native legends and reflections of modern-day Natives.


Vanishing Arctic

Vanishing Arctic
Author: Tom H. Watkins
Publisher:
Total Pages: 96
Release: 1988
Genre: Photography
ISBN:

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Photos and text depict migration of the porcupine, North America's largest caribou herd, the wolverine, and the wildflowers that decorate the plains and tundrabeds, glacierfed waterfalls, and the mountain peaks. Good photos of a stark land. No index or bibliography. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR


Alaska's Native Art

Alaska's Native Art
Author: Amos Burg
Publisher:
Total Pages: 22
Release: 1974
Genre: Alaska Native art
ISBN:

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Painting in the North

Painting in the North
Author: Anchorage Museum of History and Art
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 174
Release: 1993
Genre: Art
ISBN:

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Surveying more than two centuries of Alaskan drawing, painting, and printmaking, this landmark study introduces a long-overlooked chapter of art history.


A New Deal for Native Art

A New Deal for Native Art
Author: Jennifer McLerran
Publisher: University of Arizona Press
Total Pages: 312
Release: 2022-08-16
Genre: History
ISBN: 0816550379

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As the Great Depression touched every corner of America, the New Deal promoted indigenous arts and crafts as a means of bootstrapping Native American peoples. But New Deal administrators' romanticization of indigenous artists predisposed them to favor pre-industrial forms rather than art that responded to contemporary markets. In A New Deal for Native Art, Jennifer McLerran reveals how positioning the native artist as a pre-modern Other served the goals of New Deal programs—and how this sometimes worked at cross-purposes with promoting native self-sufficiency. She describes federal policies of the 1930s and early 1940s that sought to generate an upscale market for Native American arts and crafts. And by unraveling the complex ways in which commodification was negotiated and the roles that producers, consumers, and New Deal administrators played in that process, she sheds new light on native art’s commodity status and the artist’s position as colonial subject. In this first book to address the ways in which New Deal Indian policy specifically advanced commodification and colonization, McLerran reviews its multi-pronged effort to improve the market for Indian art through the Indian Arts and Crafts Board, arts and crafts cooperatives, murals, museum exhibits, and Civilian Conservation Corps projects. Presenting nationwide case studies that demonstrate transcultural dynamics of production and reception, she argues for viewing Indian art as a commodity, as part of the national economy, and as part of national political trends and reform efforts. McLerran marks the contributions of key individuals, from John Collier and Rene d’Harnoncourt to Navajo artist Gerald Nailor, whose mural in the Navajo Nation Council House conveyed distinctly different messages to outsiders and tribal members. Featuring dozens of illustrations, A New Deal for Native Art offers a new look at the complexities of folk art “revivals” as it opens a new window on the Indian New Deal.