The rise of photography in the United States coincided with the spread of Manifest Destiny, and this handsome exhibit catalogue presents a veritable photographic who\u27s who of the men (and a few women) who were pivotal actors in both the conquest and representation of the American West. The National Portrait Gallery organized the exhibition, Faces of the Frontier, in 2009, with travels to the San Diego Historical Society and the Gilcrease Museum in 2010. The book consists of essays by curator Frank H. Goodyear III and Richard White and the portraits themselves, accompanied by biographical captions. Four thematic sections divide the images: land, exploration, discord, and possibilities. The first image, fittingly, is of President James K. ...
Visual history is gaining respect as a portal to the past, and one individual who stands out in depi...
This rich collection of essays is intellectually substantial, culturally significant, and much overd...
This scholarly study is a welcome effort to broaden the horizon of what many Americans have come to ...
The rise of photography in the United States coincided with the spread of Manifest Destiny, and this...
Review of: Print the Legend: Photography and the American West. Sandweiss, Martha A
Review of: The Frontier in American Culture: An Exhibition at the Newberry Library, August 26, 1994-...
Novels and histories of the American West have always attracted a large, varied audience. Some reade...
The term frontier elicits many different meanings and interpretations among scholars and the Ameri...
Log cabins and wagon trains, cowboys and Indians, Buffalo Bill and General Custer. These and other f...
Review of: Pioneer Photographers from the Mississippi to the Continental Divide: A Biographical Dict...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
THE EMPEROR ON THE AMERICAN FRONTIER Richard White, the creator of the touring panel exhibition The...
Review of: "Twenty-five Years among the Indians and Buffalo: A Frontier Memoir", by William D. Stree...
The original face-to-face encounter of American Indians in portraits and pictorial field studies rei...
For his The First Americans, Goetzmann selected photographs from the Library of Congress collection....
Visual history is gaining respect as a portal to the past, and one individual who stands out in depi...
This rich collection of essays is intellectually substantial, culturally significant, and much overd...
This scholarly study is a welcome effort to broaden the horizon of what many Americans have come to ...
The rise of photography in the United States coincided with the spread of Manifest Destiny, and this...
Review of: Print the Legend: Photography and the American West. Sandweiss, Martha A
Review of: The Frontier in American Culture: An Exhibition at the Newberry Library, August 26, 1994-...
Novels and histories of the American West have always attracted a large, varied audience. Some reade...
The term frontier elicits many different meanings and interpretations among scholars and the Ameri...
Log cabins and wagon trains, cowboys and Indians, Buffalo Bill and General Custer. These and other f...
Review of: Pioneer Photographers from the Mississippi to the Continental Divide: A Biographical Dict...
In the latter half of the nineteenth century a deadly clash of cultures swept across the Great Plain...
THE EMPEROR ON THE AMERICAN FRONTIER Richard White, the creator of the touring panel exhibition The...
Review of: "Twenty-five Years among the Indians and Buffalo: A Frontier Memoir", by William D. Stree...
The original face-to-face encounter of American Indians in portraits and pictorial field studies rei...
For his The First Americans, Goetzmann selected photographs from the Library of Congress collection....
Visual history is gaining respect as a portal to the past, and one individual who stands out in depi...
This rich collection of essays is intellectually substantial, culturally significant, and much overd...
This scholarly study is a welcome effort to broaden the horizon of what many Americans have come to ...