
Attribution
Ruth B. PhillipsPublication Details
BookUniversity of Washington Press1998Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (LOWER LEVEL) E78.E2 P55 1998 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
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Notes
- "This book examines a range of art forms produced by Indians in northeastern North America for sale to travelers and tourists during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The Aboriginal peoples of the Woodlands were the first in North America to experience economic and social marginalization and, in consequence, the first to rely on the production of commodities for the tourist trade. These hybrid art forms combine indigenous materials and techniques such as quillwork, moosehair embroidery, birchbark, and basketry with Euro-American genres and styles. Tourist art of the period is generally of high quality and great aesthetic interest. Yet scholars have largely ignored these objects because of their incorporation of Euro-North American influences." "An innovative combination of fieldwork, art historical analysis, and historical contextualization, this study for the first time rigorously compares a Native souvenir production to a wide range of Euro-American decorative arts and home crafts. It identifies the sources of object types and styles and reveals the innovative differences displayed by Aboriginal trade wares. Images newly uncovered in archives and travel literature - including depictions of Native vendors and makers - illustrate the book, along with never before displayed or published objects from museum collections in Europe and North America."–BOOK JACKET
Contents
- Ch. 1. Souvenir, Commodity, and Art in the Northeastern Woodlands
- Ch. 2. The Collecting and Display of Souvenir Arts: Authenticity and the "Strictly Commercial"
- Ch. 3. Representation in the Miniature: Effigy, Toy, Model, Souvenir
- Ch. 4. The Iconography of Indianness: Picturing Natural Man
- Ch. 5. The Iconography of Indianness: The Floral, the Feminine, and the Folk
- Ch. 6. Genre, Gender, and Home Craft: Victoriana and Aboriginal Art
- Ch. 7. Changing Discourses: The Critique of the Touristic in Contemporary Art Practice
ISBN
- 0295976489
- 0295977515
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