Towards the middle of the nineteenth-century a swift and dramatic transformation occurred in textiles and other kinds of art made by Woodlands Indians in northeastern North America, This transformation was accomplished in part by a wholesale replacement of indigenous materials with Euro-American manufactures— cloth for hide, glass beads for porcupine quills and silk ribbon for paint. It also encompassed the introduction of entirely new object types and the substitution of a new vocabulary of floral imagery for older iconographic traditions. It is not, of course, coincidental that this change in iconography and materials occurred simultaneously with the rapid growth of the tourist trade in the northeast. Although Native Americans had begun t...
This presentation explores the impact of introducing glass beads on the weaving practices of three P...
Overlooked objects in museum collections can reveal complex social relationships behind well-known t...
In the seventeenth century, when Europeans first arrived in what are now the New England and mid-Atl...
Towards the middle of the nineteenth-century a swift and dramatic transformation occurred in textile...
Towards the middle of the nineteenth-century a swift and dramatic transformation occurred in textile...
A relatively new type of raised beadwork has “become a way of life” for the Oneida people of Wiscons...
To the 16th-century Iroquois living in what is now central New York state, European glass trade bead...
At the time of European contact, the Native Americans of North America had a long-standing tradition...
Though they are common objects in private and museum collections, moccasins frequently lack substant...
The original inhabitants of the United States were hunters and farmers, who used the produce of the ...
This thesis examines the impact of European trade goods on some aspects of North American Indian clo...
Along the coastal region of eastern North America, the fur trade created a number of changes within ...
India to Appalachia: How Cottage Industries Preserve Textile Heritage examines the role of the hand...
This article explores issues of representation in historical Aboriginal Canadian artworks, focusing ...
Despite the self-conscious modernism of the early 20th century, American needlework was filled with ...
This presentation explores the impact of introducing glass beads on the weaving practices of three P...
Overlooked objects in museum collections can reveal complex social relationships behind well-known t...
In the seventeenth century, when Europeans first arrived in what are now the New England and mid-Atl...
Towards the middle of the nineteenth-century a swift and dramatic transformation occurred in textile...
Towards the middle of the nineteenth-century a swift and dramatic transformation occurred in textile...
A relatively new type of raised beadwork has “become a way of life” for the Oneida people of Wiscons...
To the 16th-century Iroquois living in what is now central New York state, European glass trade bead...
At the time of European contact, the Native Americans of North America had a long-standing tradition...
Though they are common objects in private and museum collections, moccasins frequently lack substant...
The original inhabitants of the United States were hunters and farmers, who used the produce of the ...
This thesis examines the impact of European trade goods on some aspects of North American Indian clo...
Along the coastal region of eastern North America, the fur trade created a number of changes within ...
India to Appalachia: How Cottage Industries Preserve Textile Heritage examines the role of the hand...
This article explores issues of representation in historical Aboriginal Canadian artworks, focusing ...
Despite the self-conscious modernism of the early 20th century, American needlework was filled with ...
This presentation explores the impact of introducing glass beads on the weaving practices of three P...
Overlooked objects in museum collections can reveal complex social relationships behind well-known t...
In the seventeenth century, when Europeans first arrived in what are now the New England and mid-Atl...