Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Edward Curtis

 
Art Encyclopedia: Edward Sheriff Curtis

(b White Water, WI, 1868; d Los Angeles, CA, 21 Oct 1954). American photographer. A self-taught photographer, in 1887 he became a partner in a portrait studio in Seattle, where he experimented with new subject-matter. He decided to make the photography of native peoples his speciality and accompanied anthropologists on the Harriman Expedition to Alaska in 1899 and to Montana in 1900. In 1901 he conceived a vast project to document photographically the lives, customs and folklore of the native American tribes and to record their customs. President Theodore Roosevelt introduced him to J. Pierpont Morgan, who sponsored Curtis's work and his publication of the luxurious 20-volume compendium The North American Indian (1907-30).

See the Abbreviations for further details.



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Photography Encyclopedia: Edward Sherriff Curtis
Top

Curtis, Edward Sherriff (1868-1952), American photographer, famous for his monumental and seminal work The North American Indian. Containing c. 2, 200 photographs, it was published as twenty volumes of photogravures with text, in portfolios and bound volumes between 1907 and 1930. Drawn from over 40, 000 negatives, it covered the appearance, lives, and customs of Native Americans, from the Inuit of the north to the Zuni of the south. The inspiration was the desire to record cultures perceived as dying out, epitomized by Curtis's celebrated The Vanishing Race—Navaho (1904). This elegiac feeling was accentuated by the aesthetic values of pictorialism, the romantic construction of Curtis's images, and their superb print quality. Some gravures are printed on tissue-like paper, so that light reflects back from the mount through the image.

After serving an apprenticeship in St Paul, Minnesota, Curtis started his own business in Seattle in the late 1880s. By 1895 he had begun photographing Native American peoples. His great project, however, did not start until 1901 when, following a trip to Blackfoot Nation, Montana, he began to develop the necessary photographic skills and concepts. The project was supported by President Theodore Roosevelt, who wrote an introduction to the first volume, and from 1906 the bibliophile J. P. Morgan contributed financially. However, Curtis himself bore much of the cost, ruining both his finances and his health. Fewer than 300 of the 500 copies of the work were sold.

Curtis's representations of Native Americans remain controversial. His ethnographic romanticism, manifested through staging and re-enactment, and the removal of traces of the modern within images, has been seen as problematical both in documentary terms and ethically. His images' power is such that they have come to stand for Native American cultures and convey a spurious ‘authenticity’. However, this does not detract from his sympathetic and masterly vision of a Native past. Significantly, despite acknowledging the problems, many Native American people today view his images positively, for he is seen as respecting Native American cultures and portraying their forebears as beautiful and strong.

— Elizabeth Edwards

Bibliography

  • Gidley, M., Edward S. Curtis and the North American Indian, Incorporated (1998)
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Edward Sheriff Curtis
Top
Curtis, Edward Sheriff, 1868-1952, American photographer and pioneer ethnographer known for his documentation of Native Americans, b. near Whitewater, Wis. Curtis was obsessed with photography from childhood, building homemade cameras and studying photographic guides in his teens. His family lived in St. Paul, Minn. (1874-87), where he was a photographer's apprentice, and moved to Seattle (1987), where he became a partner in a photography studio, specializing mainly in portraits. Curtis took his first pictures of Native Americans in the mid-1890s. During the same period he developed printing processes that utilized gold, silver, or platinum and that formed the basis of his luminous goldtone ("Curt-tone"), silver-tint, and platinum-tint prints. In 1899 he was appointed as a photographer for Edward H. Harriman's expedition to Alaska, the last of the great 19th-century scientific surveys; during this trip his interest in indigenous peoples increased.

In 1900, Curtis made his first formal photographic trip to Native American lands, visiting the Blackfeet in Montana and initiating the enormous project that would absorb him for the next 30 years. He traveled throughout the W United States, Canada, and Alaska, visiting nearly 100 tribal groups and taking more than 40,000 photographs. Many of the resulting photogravure prints are included in his North American Indian, a prodigious 20-volume set that is at once a work of art, an ethnographic survey, and a monumental photographic essay. Curtis has been criticized for staging some photographs, manipulating some negatives to remove seemingly anachronistic elements, and otherwise falsifying images. Nonetheless, his beautifully executed portraits and scenes of ceremony and daily activities generally successfully portray individual Native Americans and now vanished traditional native ways of life. Curtis's book, printed from 1907 to 1930 in a limited and expensive edition, was encouraged by President Theodore Roosevelt, who wrote its foreward, and at first partially financed by J. P. Morgan. Latter stages of publication were mainly paid for by Curtis himself through lectures, exhibitions, sales, and other means, but despite these efforts the photographer was in chronic debt. Curtis also made some 10,000 recordings of the rituals, music, legends, and everyday speech of various Native American groups, and wrote extensively and produced a film, In the Land of the Headhunters (1914), detailing Kwakiutl culture in the Pacific Northwest.

By the time Curtis died, his work had lapsed into obscurity. He was rediscovered a decade later as public awareness of Native American life and early photography burgeoned. Interest in his work increased with the finding (1976) of a trove of his platinum prints at the Smithsonian Institution and the discovery (1977) of his original photogravure plates, and was bolstered by the concurrent boom in the photography market. Since then, his reputation has soared, and his work has been widely exhibited, studied, and reproduced.

Bibliography

See biographies by B. A. Davis (1985) and L. Lawlor (1994); studies by C. Cardozo and A. White, ed. (1993), M. Gridley (1998), H. C. Adam, ed. (1999), and C. Cardozo et al., ed. (2000); A. Makepeace, Coming to Light: Edward S. Curtis and the North American Indians (documentary and book, 2001).

Wikipedia: Edward Curtis (politician)
Top

Edward Curtis (born October 25, 1801 in Windsor, Vermont – died August 2, 1856) was a Representative from New York for two terms, March 4, 1837 through March 3, 1841. He served as Collector of the Port of New York beginning on March 23, 1841 until July 7, 1844. [1]

Education and career

He graduated from Union College in Schenectady, in 1823. He studied law and was admitted to the bar in 1824. He began practice in New York City along with his brother George Curtis. The two formed a partnership with Judge Daniel B. Talmadge.

In 1834 Curtis became a member of the common council from the Third Ward of New York City.[2] He was voted president of the board of assistant aldermen as a representative of the Whig Party (United States). His opponent in this political contest was James R. Whiting of the Democratic Party (United States).

He was elected to the Twenty-fifth Congress and Twenty-sixth Congress, (March 4, 1837 and March 3, 1841), representing New York's 3rd congressional district. He was chosen chairman of the Committee of Commerce. Curtis was not a candidate for renomination.

He was appointed Collector of the Port of New York by William Henry Harrison,[2] and served until July 7, 1844. Curtis was removed as collector by John Tyler. Afterward he resumed the practice of law in Washington, D.C..

Death

He died in New York City on August 2, 1856 following a lingering illness.[2] His place of burial is unknown.

References

  1. ^ The New Collector Talks, New York Times, July 31, 1891, pg. 8.
  2. ^ a b c Death of Hon. Edward Curtis, New York Times, August 5, 1856, pg. 4.



United States House of Representatives
Preceded by
Gideon Lee
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives
from New York's 3rd congressional district

1837 – 1841
Succeeded by
Fernando Wood

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Photography Encyclopedia. The Oxford Companion to the Photograph. Copyright © 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Edward Curtis (politician)" Read more