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As we gaze
upon others, we can learn much about ourselves. Like a beam
of light distorted through a crystal prism, our understanding
of other cultures is filtered through our own. The inherent
transparency of a lens does not infer objectivity. The photographs
presented in this exhibition are part of the series The North
American Indian written, illustrated and published between
1907 and 1930 by Edward S. Curtis. The twenty volumes and portfolios
from the Stan Hywet Hall & Gardens collection aimed to be
a comprehensive record of a people whose way of life was, according
to Theodore Roosevelt in the first volume's foreword, "on
the point of passing away." Through these images, and with
artifacts in the Kent State University Museum and the Valerie
and Dean Hugebeck collections, we can focus on Native American
identity and address the issues of subjectivity and idealism
in the act of collecting and exhibiting cultural material and
in the work of Edward S. Curtis.
There are
multiple storytellers. A limited number of individuals were
chosen as subjects by the photographer, whose work was then
sought by collectors, and these combined voices were further
narrowed through the curatorial process. Through selection,
interpretation and juxtaposition, the narrative is seldom objective.
This story is fragmental and told by a costume historian in
the twenty first century. People and adornment are its focus.
In today's multicultural familiarity with body modifications
such as ear, nose and tongue piercing, tattoos and scarification,
a new appreciation can be gained of what was once considered
strange. Broader views of gender have also impacted how hair,
clothing, cosmetics and jewelry can be used by both men and
women as a marker of individuality and collective character.
This enables a far different viewing of Curtis' work than would
have been the case a hundred or even twenty years ago. The artifacts
on display are historical documents, but they are also portraits
of individuals whose voices, though filtered, can be heard,
and whose culture and sense of identify are proudly displayed
through sartorial means.
Native American
culture was, and still is, alive and ever changing. Curtis embarked
on his journey to capture and document the lives of the Native
peoples of North America in 1889 amidst devastating political
legislation designed to "civilize Indians." Frontier
expansion, industrialization and globalization had already caused
unprecedented changes in Native American lives. Fearful of the
impending doom, yet reverential, Curtis' vision 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. At times staged and inaccurate,
his haunting photographs captivated his contemporaries and have
shaped our vision of the First Nations to this day. Paradoxically,
his search for what he considered to be "primitive life"
was funded by industrialists whose efforts accelerated the onslaught
of modernization. Franklin Augustus Seiberling, the co-founder
of the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company, was among the captains
of industry who subscribed to and received Curtis' work in installments.
At Stan Hywet, his magnificent country estate with its engineered
views of nature, Mr. Seiberling could, through Curtis' work,
further distance himself from the growing urban chaos. Though
criticized by archeologists and historians early on, Curtis'
body of work covers over 40,000 photographs as well as linguistic
terminology, songs, oral histories and sound recordings and
continues to appeal to both scholars and the general public
despite its flaws.
The "broad
and luminous picture" Curtis offered the viewer is not
unlike the acts of collecting and displaying artifacts, which
remain riddled with imperfections. Though these activities help
to preserve pieces of history and fuel public interest, they
are nonetheless selective approaches that can narrow our vision
and understanding of world cultures. The visual compositions,
the artifacts collected, and the stories told are a legacy that
continues to be questioned and examined.
Anne Bissonnette, PhD
Curator
Kent State University Museum
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