viernes, 18 de enero de 2019

1898 | Christa Zaat

Christa Zaat

La imagen puede contener: una o varias personas e interior

Gertrude Stanton Käsebier (American photographer) 1852 - 1934
Zitkala Sa, Sioux Indian and activist, ca. 1898
platinum print (overall material)
16.6 x 11.5 cm. (6.54 x 4.5 in.)
National Museum of American History, Kenneth E. Behring Center

In addition to photographing the Sioux performers sent by Buffalo Bill Cody to her studio, Käsebier was able to arrange a portrait session with Zitkala Sa, "Red Bird," also known as Gertrude Simmons (1876-1938), a Yankton Sioux woman of Native American and white ancestry. She was born on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, like many of the Sioux traveling with the Wild West show. Well educated, she studied at reservation schools, the Carlisle Indian School, Earlham College in Indiana, and the Boston Conservatory of Music. Zitkala Sa became an accomplished author, musician, composer, and dedicated worker for the reform of United States Indian policies.
Käsebier photographed Zitkala Sa in tribal dress and western clothing, clearly identifying the two worlds in which this woman lived and worked. In many of the images, Zitkala Sa holds her violin or a book, further indicating her interests. Käsebier experimented with backdrops, including a Victorian floral print, and photographic printing. She used the painterly gum-bichromate process for several of these images, adding increased texture and softer tones to the photographs.


La imagen puede contener: una o varias personas e interior

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