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What makes Northwest Coast Native American art authentic? And why, when most of art history is a history of the avant-garde, is tradition so deeply valued by contemporary Native American artists and their patrons? In Privileging the Past, Judith Ostrowitz approaches these questions through a careful consideration of replicas, reproductions, and creative translations of past forms of Northwest Coast dances, ceremonies, masks, painted screens, and houses.
Ostrowitz examines several different art forms―two very different architectural constructions, a dance performance, and modern sculptures and dance paraphernalia―considering their relations to arts of the past. Chief Shakes’ Community House has endured, in various forms, at the same site in Wrangell, Alaska, for close to 170 years as an “old style” Tlingit tribal house. The Grand Hall of the Canadian Museum of Civilization at Hull, Quebec, is constructed as a Native village with an assemblage of replicated houses made by contemporary Native artists, both old and new totem poles, and references to the Northwest Coast landscape. The opening ceremonies of the exhibition Chiefly Feasts: The Enduring Kwakiutl Potlatch at the American Museum of Natural History in New York in October 1991 included a dance program by a group of Native performers from Vancouver Island, B.C., adapting traditional elements for a long and complex theatrical presentation. Finally, artists such as Art Thompson, Beau Dick, Doug Cranmer, Robert Davidson, Susan Point, and Jim Schoppert produce vital and lively art―masks, rattles, prints, and paintings are considered here―that utilizes inherited subject matter and conventionalized stylistic devices. Ostrowitz finds that these replicas and performances function as do most other works of art, referencing history in a highly selective manner.
Ostrowitz draws on an extensive body of interviews she conducted with tribal leaders, artists, and artisans long known and highly respected in both Native and non-Native venues. Throughout the book, we hear their voices―members of the Alfred, Cranmer, Hunt, Tallio, and Webster families, and many other individuals―as they relate their responses to the modern adaptation of their cultural heritage.
Privileging the Past explores intellectual issues raised by postmodern theory, supported by detailed studies of projects that will interest a broad audience of students, historians, museum-goers, and those intrigued by Native American art and cultural history.
Review: Ostrowitz's emphasis on how Natives of the Northwest Coast continually reconstruct history in their visual culture is an important contribution to the fields of art history, anthropology and Native studies. -- Lianne McTavish Acadiensis
Title: Privileging the Past: Reconstructing History...
Publisher: University of Washington Press
Publication Date: 1999
Binding: Hardcover
Condition: Good
Seller: Midtown Scholar Bookstore, Harrisburg, PA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. With very good dust jacket. Very Good hardcover with light shelfwear - NICE! Standard-sized. Seller Inventory # mon0000165570
Seller: Vashon Island Books, Vashon, WA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. Color, B/w Illustrations By Cyrus Leroy Baldridge (illustrator). First Edition Presumed. Size: 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Book. Seller Inventory # 0841174
Seller: Midtown Scholar Bookstore, Harrisburg, PA, U.S.A.
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Seller: BISON BOOKS - ABAC/ILAB, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
Hardcover. pp. xiii, 201. 4to. Colour plates, black and white photographs. Seller Inventory # 074616
Seller: A Good Read, LLC, San Antonio, TX, U.S.A.
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Seller: Powell's Bookstores Chicago, ABAA, Chicago, IL, U.S.A.
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Seller: Easton's Books, Inc., Mount Vernon, WA, U.S.A.
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Seller: Tacoma Book Center, Tacoma, WA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Included. ISBN 0-295-97814-7. Hardback edition. Near Fine Condition book in a Near Fine Condition Dustjacket. Tight, bright, attractive copy with no markings to the book. Like new condition. No statement of later printing on copyright page. Co. Seller Inventory # 148971
Seller: Tacoma Book Center, Tacoma, WA, U.S.A.
Hardcover. Condition: Fine. Dust Jacket Condition: Dustjacket included. First Edition. ISBN 0295978147. Hardcover copy in fine condition with fine condition dustwrapper. First printing. Tight clean copy. C 33-2 2. No Signature. Seller Inventory # 2004872