Mary Jane Lenz’s insightful, authoritative text discusses the intriguing roles dolls have played in Native American cultures and explores their significance today, while historical photographs bring to life the people who made and used these remarkable creations. Featuring a superb selection from the museum’s collections, Lenz’s landmark book will appeal to scholar, collector, and general reader alike
Focusing on four key figures - Morris de Camp Crawford, John Sloan, Amelia Elizabeth White, and René...
THE VAST MAJORITY of Native American objects in private and public collections are the legacy of the...
2 images. Navajo children (present dolls to Broadway-Crenshaw), 14 September 1953. Mrs. Elma Begaii ...
Mary Jane Lenz’s insightful, authoritative text discusses the intriguing roles dolls have played in ...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
Life in miniature, history in vibrant hues, art on parade-this is what is presented in Grand Process...
A conversation between Dr. Monika Siebert and Marina Tyquiengco on: Americans, National Museum of th...
This presentation will offer a view of the work of a group of renowned world-class artists who have ...
Dolls seem to be a ubiquitous feature of American girlhood, cherished objects played with by girls f...
Together, the articles in this special issue of the American Indian Culture and Research Journal off...
For this project I have developed a body of work that investigates the relationships between objects...
For centuries, Native American women have been presented in a variety of stereotypical manners, from...
In the early twentieth century, Native American baskets, blankets, and bowls could be purchased from...
Spirit Capture, unlike all too many of the proliferating collections of photographs of American Indi...
The indigenous arts of the United States have long stood in a vexed relationship with the canons of ...
Focusing on four key figures - Morris de Camp Crawford, John Sloan, Amelia Elizabeth White, and René...
THE VAST MAJORITY of Native American objects in private and public collections are the legacy of the...
2 images. Navajo children (present dolls to Broadway-Crenshaw), 14 September 1953. Mrs. Elma Begaii ...
Mary Jane Lenz’s insightful, authoritative text discusses the intriguing roles dolls have played in ...
"Indigeneity at the Crossroads of American Studies." Published as a special joint issue with America...
Life in miniature, history in vibrant hues, art on parade-this is what is presented in Grand Process...
A conversation between Dr. Monika Siebert and Marina Tyquiengco on: Americans, National Museum of th...
This presentation will offer a view of the work of a group of renowned world-class artists who have ...
Dolls seem to be a ubiquitous feature of American girlhood, cherished objects played with by girls f...
Together, the articles in this special issue of the American Indian Culture and Research Journal off...
For this project I have developed a body of work that investigates the relationships between objects...
For centuries, Native American women have been presented in a variety of stereotypical manners, from...
In the early twentieth century, Native American baskets, blankets, and bowls could be purchased from...
Spirit Capture, unlike all too many of the proliferating collections of photographs of American Indi...
The indigenous arts of the United States have long stood in a vexed relationship with the canons of ...
Focusing on four key figures - Morris de Camp Crawford, John Sloan, Amelia Elizabeth White, and René...
THE VAST MAJORITY of Native American objects in private and public collections are the legacy of the...
2 images. Navajo children (present dolls to Broadway-Crenshaw), 14 September 1953. Mrs. Elma Begaii ...