Non-Western Art History. The Art of Native America Part Three. Native North American. The Art of Native America

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Non-Western Art History The Art of Native America Part Three 1 2 The Art of Native America Common Characteristics of Native American Art South America Nazca Peoples Moche Peoples Incan Empire Central America Olmec Empire Mayan Empire Aztec Empire North America Mississippian Culture Southwest Indians Northwest Indians Artistic traditions developed largely independent of other cultures. Some cultures had large cities with monumental architecture. Artists developed regionally and the materials they used were highly dependent on their local environment Artists were respected individuals, caretakers of sacred artworks Used gold, silver and copper for art; no iron or bronze Artworks reflected complex relationships between people and gods. No distinction between fine and applied arts. 3 4 Common Spiritual Beliefs of Native American Cultures Native North American Two worlds, terrestrial and celestial, shamans traveled between the two. Shamans used art and architecture to travel to the other world to receive messages from the ancestors and gods. Entered trance state that gave them visionary powers Trance enhanced by drums, rattles and masks sometimes representing the shaman s animal counterpart. Shaman returned with special knowledge and messages Shamans used their powers to heal the sick, assist hunters and warriors, control weather and advise rulers. 5 6 1

Human Effigy Pipe, 500 BC 1 AD, Adena, Northeast Indians, H: 8 inches, Stone, Great Serpent Mound, 500 BC-200 AD or 1000-1200 AD, Adena People, Northeast Indians, Adams County, Ohio, Clay mound, L: 1,300 feet, 5 feet high and 20 25 feet wide, 7 8 Mica In The Shape of a Hand, 200 BC 400 AD, Hopewell, Northeast Indians, H: 11.5 inches, Mica, 9 Great Serpent Mound, Ohio State Park, 500 BC-200 AD or 1000-1200 AD, Adena Northeast Indians, Adams County, Ohio, Timothy A. Price and Nichole I. Stump, March, 2002 10 Bowl (Double Headed), c. 1800, Cherokee (Southeast) or Iroquois (Northeast), H: 13.5 inches, Wood and brass, Artist s Reconstruction of Cahokia City, 1100 AD, Illini, Southeast Indians, East of St. Louis, MO 11 12 2

13 Artist s Reconstruction of Monks Mound, Cahokia City, 1100 AD, Illini, Southeast Indians, East of St. Louis, MO, Source: Seventy Wonders of the World 14 Artist s Rendering of Mississippian Copper Artworks, 1100 AD, Illini, Southeast Indians, East of St. Louis, MO, Source: Wikipedia 15 Seated Figure, 13 th 14 th century, Mississippian, Southeast Indians, H: 26.5 inches, quartz sandstone, 16 Head Effigy Vessel, 1300 1500, Mississippian, Southeast Indians, H: 7.25 inches, Buffware and pigment, Boy Chief, Ojibbeway, 1843, Plains Indian George Catlin (1796 1872), Oil on canvas, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC Shield, 1860-1868, Southern Cheyenne, Plains Indians, H: 19.5 inches, Buffalo rawhide, tanned buckskin, bells, feathers, corn husks, natural pigment, 17 18 3

Pouch, 1800-1825, Eastern Sioux, Plains Indians, H: 10 inches, Buckskin, mallard duck scalp, porcupine quills, tin cones and dyed deer hair, 19 Scenes of Plains Indian Life, 1900, Cadzi Cody, Wind River Shoshone, Plains Indians, H: 68 inches, Elk hide and pigments, Minneapolis Institute of Art 20 Basket, c. 1900, Western Apache, Plains Indians, H: 28 inches, Willow, devil s claw and wood, 21 22 Beaded Dress, 1890, Mrs. Minnie Sky Arrow, Fort Peck Reservation, Montana, Plains Indians, Glass beads on buckskin, Black Mesa Aerial View, Pueblo People, Arizona Source: Arizona Highways 23 24 Polychrome Bowl with Bear Paw, 1625 1400 BC, Sikyatki Peoples, Arizona, D: 10 inches, Ceramics, Minneapolis Institute of Art 4

Sculpture from a Cache of Ritual Figures, c. 1350, Cliff Valley Area, New Mexico, H: 25 inches, Stone, turquoise, feathers, fiber and pigment, Art Institute of Chicago 25 Storage Container, c. 1880, Acoma Pueblo, Arizona, H: 12 inches, Terra Cotta and pigment, Minneapolis Institute of Art 26 Katsina (Kachina) Figure, Late 19 th century, Hopi Peoples, New Mexico, H: 13.5 inches, Cottonwood, fur, feather, paint, imitation pearls, native tanned leather, shell, bone Navaho Sand Painter, 1978, Navaho, New Mexico, H: approximately 20 inches, Various colored sands, pollen and flowers, 27 28 Navaho Night Chant In beauty happily I walk, With beauty before me I walk With beauty behind me I walk With beauty below me I walk With beauty above me I walk With beauty all around me I walk It is finished again in beauty It is finished in beauty Wearing Blanket, 1860-1870, Navaho Peoples, Arizona, H: 69 inches, Wool Chanted at the end of a Navaho Curing Ceremony, during which a sand painting is created. 29 30 5

31 Shaman s Amulet, c. 1750-1800, Tlingit Peoples, British Columbia, Canada, Northwest Indians L: 4.5 inches, Sperm Whale ivory, Indiana University Museum of Art 32 Raven Rattle, 19 th century, Tsimshian Peoples, British Columbia, Canada, Northwest Indians Wood and pigments, Totem Pole, Source: Stanley Park, British Columbia, Canada Northwest Indians Ceremonial House, 19 th century, Kwakiutl People, Northwest Indians, British Columbia, Canada, Source: Looking At Indian Art of the Northwest Coast by Hilary Stewart 33 34 Mask, 19 th century, Kwakiutl People, Northwest Indians, British Columbia, Canada, H: 11.5 inches, Wood, copper, human hair, paint, 35 36 Mask, 19 th 20 th century, Inuit People, Canada, Northwest Indians, H: 13.75 inches, Wood, feather, pigment, Minneapolis Institute of Art 6

This is the end of our presentation on Native America Art Part Three 37 7