Photogravure of a Native American man from a photo by Edward Sheriff Curtis (American, 1868-1952). The man is wearing a full body bear costume, including claws. He is squatting and looking at the camera, with one arm raised, showing the claws on his hand.
“From Copyright Photograph 1914 by E. S. Curtis” in lower center.
Presented in a gold colored frame with a cream mat.
Frame size: 22″H x 18″W
Image size: 9.25″H x 7″W
Born in 1868 near Whitewater, Wisconsin, Edward Sheriff Curtis became one of America’s finest photographers and ethnologists. Beginning in 1896 and ending in 1930, Curtis photographed and documented every major Native American tribe west of the Mississippi, taking over 40,000 negatives of eighty tribes. For thirty years, he devoted his life to an odyssey of photographing and documenting the lives and traditions of the Native people of North America. His photographs had an immense impact on the national imagination and continue to shape the way we see Native life and culture.
His life’s work was to record the faces and lifestyles of the Indians before they vanished forever beneath the settling of the continent by the white man. He photographed his subjects from the deserts of the Southwest to the ice floes of the Arctic, recording with his camera and pen the look and the culture of more than eighty tribes. It was an achievement both poignant and monumental.
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Creator:Edward Curtis(1868 – 1952, American)
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Creation Year:1914
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Dimensions:Height: 22 in (55.88 cm)Width: 18 in (45.72 cm)Depth: 1 in (2.54 cm)
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Medium:PaperInk
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Movement & Style:Photorealist
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Period:Early 20th Century
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Condition:GoodVery good condition. Frame is used and may show minor signs of wear, including surface scratches. New hanging hardware installed prior to shipping. Glass can be removed on request.
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Gallery Location:Soquel, CA
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Reference Number:Seller: DBH9493Seller: LU54215074342
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