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Views of American Indians: true and falsified
Key Excerpts from Article on Website of San Francisco Chronicle (San Francisco's leading newspaper)
Posted: July 31st, 2016
http://www.sfgate.com/news/article/Views-of-American-Indians...
The images that shaped public imagination of the American Indian - 19th and early 20th century photographs - were mostly fiction. Often, they were sentimentalized portrayals of what Edward S. Curtis, the most successful of all who trained their cameras on the subject, called the vanishing race. The ... pictures glossed over attitudes and policies that today are seen as cruelly neglectful, if not genocidal. Curtis himself, funded with J.P. Morgan money to produce some 40,000 photographic documents for his magnificent 20-volume The North American Indian, is known to have choreographed ceremonies and dances, phonied up costumes, retouched negatives to remove all signs of modernity; he paid reservation residents to play the part of native nobility. Other photographers purported to show the fearsomeness of the American Indian warrior. Two ... intensely engaging exhibitions newly opened at the California Historical Society present images of Northern California and southern Oregons Modoc tribe. Sensationalist Portrayals of the Modoc War, 1872-73 examines reports of a sad chapter of American history, when a band of about 60 Indian fighters held off 600 U.S. Army troops. Native Portraits: Contemporary Tintypes by Ed Drew features Drews revival of a 19th century photographic process to depict present-day Modocs as they choose to be seen. Side by side, the two shows add up to a quiet rebuke of photographys cravenly racist portrayal of the first Americans.
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