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Ledger narratives : the Plains Indian drawings of the Lansburgh Collection at Dartmouth College / edited by Colin G. Calloway.

Penn Museum Library E78.G73 L43 2012
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Format:
Book
Contributor:
Calloway, Colin G. (Colin Gordon), 1953-
Hood Museum of Art.
Series:
New directions in Native American studies ; v. 8.
New directions in Native American studies
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Lansburgh, Mark.
Hood Museum of Art.
Indian ledger drawings--Great Plains--Catalogs.
Indian ledger drawings.
Lansburgh, Mark--Art collections--Catalogs.
Drawing--New Hampshire--Hanover--Catalogs.
Drawing.
Hood Museum of Art--Catalogs.
Indians of North America--Great Plains.
Indians of North America.
Art museums.
Great Plains.
New Hampshire--Hanover.
Genre:
Catalogs.
Physical Description:
viii, 283 pages : illustrations ; 30 cm.
Edition:
First [edition].
Place of Publication:
Norman : University of Oklahoma Press, [2012]
Summary:
The Hood Museum of Art at Dartmouth College has acquired more than 140 works that form the largest known group of Native American ledger drawings. This book, edited by Colin G. Calloway (history, Native American studies, Dartmouth College), reproduces all of them. While some reproductions could be larger, the image and color quality here is very good. Ledger drawings were made on European record books by Plains peoples (here, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Sioux, Crow, and Kiowa) for personal use or sale in the period between trade contact and early reservation life. They document a rich mix of events remembered by people who had recently lost their freedom, visual encounters with (and critiques of) new subjects, and responses to the interests of white buyers. This book is volume eight in the U. of Oklahoma Press series New Directions in Native American Studies. In this case, the new direction is postmodern critical theory. The text introduces useful information, for instance noting the transition from societies where wealth and power for men depended on getting horses and war honors to reservation life, where wealth and power for men depended on making pictures of getting horses and war honors, for an audience of their captors. However, the ledger drawings themselves are given short shrift by many contributors' texts. Ledger artists carefully coded much information in the name glyphs, horse brands, choice of places and events, and details of flags and costume. We could learn much from knowledgeable guides to these details, and discussion of what perspectives the artists tried to share with their audience, where they used subversion or compromise, and what they knew they could hide in plain sight. But beneath strong words about capitalism and imperialism, the book's intellectual program tends to make French philosophers sound much more important than Indian artists. The work of a few contemporary artists using the ledger format is noted, however, the experience of ledger artist Chief Killer is looked at in depth, and one section describes a contributor's project sharing ledger drawings by incarcerated 19th century Indian men with incarcerated contemporary Indian men, and setting up a show of the participants' resulting new ledger art. Also available in hardcover. Oversize: 9X11". Annotation ©2013 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)
Contents:
Battles, courting, and changing lives : the Mark Lansburgh collection / Joyce M. Szabo
Striving for recognition : ledger drawings and the construction and maintenance of social status during the reservation period / Michael Paul Jordan
Illustrating encounter : trade, travel, and warfare in Southern Plains ledger drawing, 1875-1880 / Jenny Tone-Pah-Hote
Unsettling accounts : the violent economies of the ledger / Melanie Benson Taylor
New geographies and surveying eyes : the landscapes of Noh-hu-nah-wih (Chief Killer) / Mary Peterson Zundo
Tracing the schoolhouse/big house legacy : ledger art and prison work / Vera B. Palmer
Reconstructing history from a fragmented past / Joyce M. Szabo
Appendix : ledger drawings in the Mark Lansburgh collection / compiled by Deborah T. Haynes.
Notes:
This book is the product of the exhibition "Native American Ledger Drawings from the Hood Museum of Art: The Mark Lansburgh Collection," held Oct. 2-Dec. 19, Hood Museum of Art, and the 2010 Leslie Humanities Institute, "Multiple Narratives in Plains Indian Ledger Art," Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 263-268) and index.
ISBN:
9780806142975
0806142979
9780806142982
0806142987
OCLC:
778314787

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