Hopi potter Nampeyo sits on a rug to paint a large pottery vessel inside an adobe house at First Mesa.
Courtesy of National Museum of the American Indian
More Information
Time Period:
1900-1900
Materials:
Techniques:
Dimensions:
12.5 x 16.25 in.
Cultures:
American Indians, Hopi Pueblo, Hopi-Tewa, Native Americans, North America, Pueblo, Southwest
City:
Hanoki (Hano, Tewa), First Mesa, Hopi Reservation
County:
Navajo County
State:
Arizona
Country:
USA
Collection History:
Edward Sheriff Curtis opened his first photo studio in 1892 in Seattle, Washington, and began photographing Native subjects. In 1899, he was appointed official photographer of the Harriman Expedition to Alaska and served on other expeditions as well. In 1906, American financier J. P. Morgan (1837-1913) commissioned Curtis to create a multi-volume documentary work on American Indians with 1500 photographs. The final volumes were published in 1930, by which time Curtis had taken 40,000 photographs documenting 80 tribes. This print formerly in the collection of photographer and publisher William Henry Jackson (1843-1942); donated to MAI at an unknown date.
Source ID:
NMAI_321259
Catalog Number:
P04608
Album Name:
Comments / Posts
Please login to ehumanity to comment/reply/report abuse