Kent
State University Museum Features
Photographs of Native Americans by Edward S. Curtis
What:
The exhibitionNative Americans through the Prism
of Culture: Edward S. Curtis & the Legacy of Collectors -
is open at the Kent State Museum.
When:
June 22, 2007 to June 15, 2008
Where:
Palmer and Mull Galleries in Rockwell Hall on the corner of East
Main and South Lincoln streets on the Kent Campus.
Background:
The exhibition Native Americans through the Prism of Culture:
Edward S. Curtis & the Legacy of Collectors is a collaborative
effort between two Northeast Ohio cultural institutions, Stan
Hywet Hall & Gardens and the Kent State University Museum.
The exhibition features photographs of Native Americans by Edward
S. Curtis, as well as artifacts from different tribal groups.
The exhibition includes items from the collections of Stan Hywet
Hall founder Franklin August Seiberling, Kent State University
Museum founder Shannon Rodgers and Jerry Silverman, as well as
Valerie and Dean Hugebeck, and provides the opportunity to address
the issues of subjectivity and idealism both in collecting practices
and in the photographic work of Edward S. Curtis.
In an effort to document the lives of the Native peoples of North
America, Curtis embarked on a life-long journey that generated
over 40,000 photographs. With great zeal and determination, he
began collecting images in 1889 amidst devastating political legislation
designed to "civilize Indians." Despite the best intentions,
his work was a product of its time and was marked by the imaginative
and emotional appeal of the heroic, adventurous, remote, and mysterious.
Through the lens of his camera an idealized world took shape where,
as an outsider and an artist, many of his own perceptions distorted
his initial factual intentions. Often staged and inaccurate, his
beautiful photographs captivated his contemporaries and have shaped
our understanding of the First Nations to this day.
The apparent transparency of the photographer's lens tends to
hide the eye behind the instrument. The biased view one culture
imposes on another is still a constant preoccupation among archeologists
and historians. The work of Curtis continues to appeal to a broad
audience despite its flaws and must be viewed in historical perspective.
The same factors that caused Curtis to narrow his vision influence
the selective focus of collectors and curators. The visual compositions
of the photographs, the artifacts collected, and the stories told
in this exhibition are a legacy that continues to be questioned
and examined.
The Kent
State University Museum is open Wednesday, Friday and Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 4:45 p.m.; Thursday from 10 a.m. to 8:45 p.m.;
and Sunday from noon to 4:45 p.m. It is closed on Monday and Tuesday.
The museum
is located in Rockwell Hall on the corner of East Main and South
Lincoln streets on the Kent Campus. Special guided tours are available
for groups by reservation. Free on-site motor coach parking is
available.
For additional
information about the Kent State University Museum, go to http://www.kent.edu/muusem/,
or call (330) 672-3450.
LINK
TO CURTIS WEBSITE
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