
Price: $8.41
Quantity: 1 available
Book Condition: Very Good
This copy has been withdrawn from a library; solid binding, text has been underlined occasionall in pen. Dust jacket is wrapped in mylar and has been taped to the covers. 244pages.
Stock Description
The field of Native American art history, and our idea of what comprises Indian art itself, were molded largely by policies of the museums and institutions that established their ethnological collections in the second half of the nineteenth century.
Objects housed in the great natural history museums--collected and seen first as natural history specimens and later as "primitive art"--have long been considered to be normative Native American art, rather than as representative of a long and changing history, and collectors' biases against Euro-American influenced work, tourist items, and contemporary art have further distorted our understanding of the field. Such attitudes and practices have led to accusations that an imperialistic Native American art history not only developed but maintains, the fictions of a colonizer/colonized relationship.
This collection of essays deals with the development of Native American art history as a discipline rather than with particular art works or artists. It focuses on the early anthropologist, museum curators, dealers, and collectors, and on the multiple levels of understanding and misunderstanding, appropriation and reappropriation, that characterized their transactions. The essays examine major figures, art forms, institutions, and events of the early years when native American artworks were first collected, studied, and displayed
Title: Early Years of Native American Art History: The Politics of Scholarship and Collecting
Categories: Native Peoples,
Edition: Ex Library
Publisher: Baltimore, Maryland, U.S.A., Univ of Washington Pr: 1992
ISBN Number: 0295972025
ISBN Number 13: 9780295972022
Binding: Hard Cover
Book Condition: Very Good
Jacket Condition: Good
Seller ID: 120015