Museum: Native Americans in the United States Essay
Submitted By Crispy_Lopes
Words: 984
Pages: 4
Montclair art museum
I visited The Montclair Art Museum; which opened its doors in 1914, it is one of the few museums in the United States devoted to American art and Native American art forms. The collection consists of more than 12,000 works. The American collection comprises paintings, prints, drawings, photographs, and sculpture dating from the 18th century to the present. The museum's holdings of traditional and contemporary American Indian art and artifacts represent the cultural achievements in weaving, pottery, woodcarving, jewelry, and textiles of indigenous Americans from seven major regions (Northwest Coast, California, Southwest, Plains, Woodlands, Southeast, and the Arctic); the work of contemporary American Indian artists is also represented. I met up with two friends from class in the parking lot and walked in together where we walked upstairs to a lobby where there ware a couple of protected paintings and a mini bar with people just waiting around for the next tour to start. Yes of course we did have a cup of wine to look fancy but couldn’t really leave the lobby to explore the museum on our own with a drink for obvious reasons. When we finished our second drink, we didn’t want to wait any more so we exited the lobby walking right into the Native American exhibit. There was mostly weaving, pottery, woodcarving, jewelry, with come modern native artwork. What really attracted me was the Native weaving baskets and traditional clothing. I felt like that was the most fascinating work t me from the Native American exhibit. There was one outfit that I particular liked the most; which happen to be a native garment for men. Warriors, spiritual leaders, and heads of tribes wore this type of garment as a badge of office and honor. These shirts were also thought to channel animal powers to the wearer and convey generosity, honor, and bravery both in battle and in peacetime. After I saw finished with the Native American exhibit, we notice the tour was going on the next room, so we joined in. The tour guy was talking about Robert Smithson. He mentioned that Smithson was a pioneer of earthworks and native to New Jersey. His sculptures, works on paper, photographs, and other conceptual art rooted in his time spent in the Garden State form a coherent body of work, which sheds important light on his artistic practice. In Franklin, the Pine Barrens, Bayonne, and Edgewater, Smithson found elements for his Non sites which were indoor earthworks for which various unorthodox materials at that time (limestone, concrete, and rocks) were brought out of their usual environment into a gallery and arranged in bin-like containers ordered from a metal fabrication shop. Photographic documentation as well as typed and handwritten descriptions accompanies these works. After a while of checking out Smithson’s work, we left the tour and checked out the rest of the gallery for myself, splitting up with my friends. I walked in the next room, which caught my attention. The hall had green walls with galleries of landscape. There was a saying at the top of the other side of the hallway, which said, in gold letters “Knowledge Must Bow to Spirit”. I thought that was pretty cool, I’ve never herd that saying before. The hall way was full of George Inness work. The first painting that lured me in was “Winter Moonlight Christmas Eve” it was a painted in 1866 with oil on canvas. It’s a painting mainly of landscape with a man walking towards the woods, where a dimly lit house resides, on a winter night under a full moon. The painting is made mostly of blue brown and shades of greys. During the 1860’s Inness made critical aesthetics and spiritual progress. Some critics around this time began to understand the work of George Inness and labeled him a genius. A significant influence on his work at this time was his exposure to the
Related Documents: Museum: Native Americans in the United States Essay
In 1974 the Administration for Native Americans was established and remains the only federal agency that serves all Native Americans including 562 federally recognized tribes. The goals of the ANA include; the creation of jobs, the establishment of tribal employment offices, formulation of environmental ordinances, strengthen governmental functions of tribes and to establish local court systems. Native Americans also have a strong belief in their culture today. There are many other organizations…
Jasmine Barnes Art 262 Dr. Ute April 16, 2014 The 19th century was a devastating situation for Native American because during this time period they would be forced to leave their native lands. America was expanding towards the west, and they wanted more land and resources. The Indians were seen as uncivilized, and they were looked down upon because of the way they lived. Americans often misunderstood them because of the rituals they practice, and because of this there were many attempts to…
Cory Weaver Native American Studies Survival and Sovereignty: The Seminole Tribes The Nation - The Seminole tribe is the product of an ethno-cultural blending of the Creek peoples from the lower-central Southeast with indigenous Floridian tribes such as the Choctaw, Timuquan and Apalachicolas, some of whom were part of the Muschogean culture. The meaning of the word “Seminole” has been interpreted, loosely, as “runaway” or “broken off” (McReynolds 1957, 12). This refers to the separation of the…
Native American religion is influenced by nature. The animals, plants, and the environment around them play an important role in the religion of Native American Indians. In the past, Native Americans have fought a long and constant battle to protect and preserve their home, land, culture, and religion from the federal government and society. Native Americans were denied access to religious grounds, banned to utilize sacred objects for rituals, and were prohibited to practice traditional religious…
The Myth of the Frontier and Neighboring Natives Ursurla L. Waller Ashford University HIS 204: American History Since 1865 Instructor Jessica Schmidt 2015 January 8 The Myth of the Frontier and Neighboring Natives Movement towards the Great West, known as, "the existence of an area of free land." fortified a boundary line that runs between savagery and civilization. Populated and seized by the Europeans in continental areas bordering the United States of America, the Western Movement began after…
American Imperialism has been a part of United States history ever since the American Revolution. Imperialism is the practice by which large, powerful nations seek to expand and maintain control or influence on a weaker nation. Throughout the years, America has had a tendency to take over other people's land. America had its first taste of Imperialistic nature back when Columbus came to America almost five hundred years ago. He fought the inhabitants with no respect for their former way of life,…
had arrived on February 8, 1885 as contact laborers. After that, they started increasing their community by setting up the first Japanese schools in the United States. By 1920, most of Japanese children in Hawaii could speak Japanese language as their first language. Because I had a chance to research about Japanese American in the United State of America, I could be learned how big their community in Hawaii; how they preserved, acquired, educated…, relevant material of historical, cultural…; how…
May 1, 2012 Period 7, Ms. Davis Illinois State Project Report Outline I. Introduction A. Name of state: Illinois, Meaning: name of Native American Indian tribe meaning “tribe of superior men” B. Location of state in the U.S: Situated in the eastern north-central US, Region name: Midwestern region C. Some unusual facts about Illinois: 1. The cities, Ottawa, Freeport, Jonesboro, Charleston, Galesburg, Quincy and Alton all hosted the famous Lincoln-Douglas…
The Pueblo people are a native American tribe in the Southwestern area of the united states. Their name Pueblo is not their actual names but, a common word for “village,” or “community,” in Spanish. The Pueblo jobs, homes, and foods are great inventions and well-known to history. They are the most famous and different to other tribes during that era. The Pueblo was probably the best farmers in the Southwest. First of all, they were able to grow corn and “Three sisters”, (beans, Squash, and…
Brendan Liam 5/18/13 Florida My state report My state located: Florida Capital: Tallahassee The 10 Major Cities of the State of Florida Atlantic * The population focus in Florida centers on the southern cities, with the notable exception of Jacksonville, nearer to the Georgia border. Jacksonville is a major port that lies on the St. John's River where the Timucua tribes once lived. It is Florida's No. 1 city by population. Located on or very near the Atlantic Ocean, Miami (2), Hialeah…