Aboriginal American Basketry: Studies in a Textile Art Without Machinery
"From the Report of the United States National Museum for 1902, pages 171-548, with two hundred and forty-eight plates."
"From the Report of the United States National Museum for 1902, pages 171-548, with two hundred and forty-eight plates."
Art Law and Arts Management Thesis (MSc) -- International Hellenic University, 2021.
Brief article on an Aboriginal artists work chosen to be on display at the Vancouver 2010 Olympics.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.17.
Historical note:
Includes note on back: "When the Saskatoon Arts and Crafts Society disbanded a collection of mats and other articles were given to the museum at Fort Battleford"A photograph of an Aboriginal (Cree) man wearing a military style outfit and holding a rifle. He wears a gun belt with ammunition and a revolver on his right hip. The gun belt and revolver are probably George Mann Jr's property, and it is likely that he staged this photograph. A gun belt and revolver are artifacts held by a direct descendant of Mann Jr. Picture was possibly taken on Onion Lake or Saddle Lake reserve between 1900 and 1930. Mann was known to visit these areas well into the 1920s.
Historical note:
On information card: Photograph of historic value taken by one of the first cameras in the Territory [NWT].Comments on the exhibition Beat Nation, that expresses freedom from oppression.
Pages 1,3 of insert entitled Raven's Eye: Special Providing News from BC & Yukon. Scanning is out of sequence for this section.
Entire issue on one pdf.
A photograph of a Metis? man with a Cree? woman and her child standing outside a teepee. Picture possibly taken by George Mann family who worked with Cree people in Onion Lake, Saddle Lake and Hobbema reserves between 1883 and 1916. Members of the family were known to continue to visit these areas well into the 1920s.