10/14/2011

From the Land of the Totem Poles: The Northwest Coast Indian Art Collection at the American Museum of Natural History Review

From the Land of the Totem Poles: The Northwest Coast Indian Art Collection at the American Museum of Natural History
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This is more than the average coffee-table book about Northwest Coast Indian art. It is lavishly and beautifully illustrated with color photographs by Stephen Myers and historical black-and-white photographs from the Museum's collection. The text by Aldona Jonaitis is an outstanding examination of intercultural conditions along the Coast, from the late 1700's when Captain Cook first arrived at Nootka Sound to the present.
The life stories of the collectors and anthropologists who lived among the tribes are intriguing, though at times the "collecting" seems more like theft, as in the case of George Emmons who had few compunctions against taking artifacts from Tlingit shaman's gravesites.
The book is more a history of the Musuem collection--how it was acquired and who did the financing and the gathering and the exhibiting--than it is a history of the native people who created the art itself. That history, oral in nature, has been somewhat obscured by the fogs of time, and Jonaitis only picks up the thread of it with the arrival of the first European explorers, when the written history began.
It could be considered tragic that these tools, implements, masks, charms, were removed from cultural context and lost the meaning inherent in thier use, and became pieces of "art" that now languish in the storage vaults of the Museum. But it's better to be grateful, I suppose, that they were preserved and that we can see them and be inspired by their beauty. They are indeed objects of great beauty, and the way that they are presented here is respectful and knowledgeable.


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In 1943 French anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss arrived in New York City, along with countless refugees from the war in Europe.He became a frequent visitor to the North Pacific Hall at the American Museum of Natural History where he could lose himself in what he affectionately called "a magic place where the dreams of childhood hold a rendezvous, where century-old tree trunks sing and speak, where undefinable objects watch out for the visitor, with the anxious stare of human faces, where animals of superhuman gentleness join their little paws like hands in prayer."Two and a half million people now visit the Museum each year to share in these enchantments.
The American Museum houses the most extensive collection of Northwest Coast Indian art in existence.It includes material from virtually every Indian group that once lived along the west coast of British Columbia and Alaska.In this book, Dr. Aldona Jonaitis traces the history of this magnificent collection, beginning in the late nineteenth century before those coastal peoples had much contact with Europeans, and their customs, languages, and art were still intact.Shortly after the collections was formed, between 1880 and 1910, Indian culture in this region went into a severe decline, to be revived a half century later as another generation of North Americans discovered their heritage.
The story alternately captivates and distresses.Populations were decimated by disease in the last years of the nineteenth century, art objects left their makers' hands bound for museums all over the world, traditional rituals were outlawed, and governments exerted strong pressures on the Indians to become assimilated.On the other side of the story are the individuals--like Franz Boas, under whose direction much of the Museum collection was assembled, Lt. George Thornton Emmons, who immersed himself in the native cultures, George Hunt, prized Kwakiutl informant for Boas and other researchers, and Charles Edenshaw, master Haida carver and painter--whose colorful lives intersect the Age of Museum Collecting.
Artifacts in the American Museum come alive through the details Dr. Jonaitis provides of their cultural context, their traditional uses, and their acquisition by collectors.Viewers see spoons and bowls that held food eaten by Boas at a potlatch; feel the spirit power emanating from a shaman's charm removed from its owner's grave by Lieutenant Emmons; sense the sadness behind the display of family crests on a house model carved by Edenshaw.
Nearly 100 color plates in the book and numerous historical photographs from the Museum's archives recall a bygone era and are a tribute to the stunning artworks of the North Pacific region.Dr. Jonaitis has written the first book devoted solely to the collection of Northwest Coast Indian art in the American Museum of Natural History.As such, the book is both an essential work for scholars and a valuable resource for the general reader.

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