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Edward S. Curtis North American Indian Photogravure Plates, approximately 1880s-1910s

Overview of the Collection

Creator
Curtis, Edward S., 1868-1952
Title
Edward S. Curtis North American Indian Photogravure Plates
Dates
approximately 1880s-1910s (inclusive)
Quantity
41 photogravure plates
Collection Number
PH1639
Summary
Original copper photogravure plates from the North American Indian portfolio by Edward Curtis
Repository
University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections
Special Collections
University of Washington Libraries
Box 352900
Seattle, WA
98195-2900
Telephone: 2065431929
Fax: 2065431931
speccoll@uw.edu
Access Restrictions

Access restricted: For terms of access, contact University of Washington Libraries Special Collections.

Request at UW

Languages
English
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Biographical Note

Edward Sheriff Curtis was born in 1868, grew up in Minnesota, and moved to the Puget Sound area with his family in 1887. In 1891 he established a photography business in Seattle. Within a few years, Curtis and his partner, Thomas Guptill, established themselves as the leading photographers on Puget Sound. In 1897 Guptill left the business, and its name was changed to Edward S. Curtis, Photographer and Photoengraver. In addition to photoengraving for other businesses and publications, Curtis' s stock in trade consisted of fashionable wedding portraits, society portraits, dramatic prints of Northwest scenery, and photographs of local Indians. As his business prospered, Curtis was able to leave the studio in the charge of others so that he could photograph subjects which interested him.

In 1899 Curtis was chosen as the official photographer for the Harriman expedition, a scientific expedition to Alaska sponsored by railroad tycoon Edward Harriman. The expedition stimulated Curtis' s interest in photographing Native Americans, exposed him to scientific methods, and provided him with a number of useful contacts. In the next several years, he continued his studio work as well as his Indian work, but from 1904 on, he spent most of his time away from Seattle. By 1903 or 1904 he began to form a plan for a photographic project that would be "a permanent record of all the important tribes of the U. S. that still retain to a considerable degree their primitive traditions and customs." Reflecting a general belief that Native Americans were a vanishing culture, Curtis embarked on a monumental project that was both artistic and ethnological. His Indian photographs emphasized traditional elements of dress and culture, deemphasizing acculturation. In this he mirrored the interests of ethnologists of the day.

Curtis' s project benefited from broad public interest in the West. In 1904 Curtis went to the Smithsonian Institution' s Bureau of American Ethnology and discussed his plans for a multi-volume collection of photos of Indians. Frederick Webb Hodge, a leader of the Ethnology Bureau, agreed to edit Curtis' s collection, The North American Indian . In 1904 Curtis also met Theodore Roosevelt, who became an enthusiastic supporter of the project. Curtis organized an Eastern tour in 1905; his exhibitions in Washington and New York resulted in sales of his pictures, patronage for his fieldwork, and a commission from Scribners magazine for four illustrated articles. In 1906 Curtis sought financial support from J. P. Morgan, who initially agreed to give Curtis $15,000 a year for five years to research, write, and publish 20 volumes of The North American Indian . Each volume included ethnological text illustrated with 75 small photogravure prints, plus a companion portfolio of 36 copper photogravure plates. The volumes were printed on handmade paper with fine engravings and bound in Moroccan leather. The first two volumes were published in Apr., 1908, but the project was not completed until 1930, when volumes 19 and 20 were released. By this time, Morgan and the Morgan estate had contributed half of the project' s total cost of $1,500,000.

Curtis concentrated his study on the tribes west of the Mississippi, from New Mexico to Alaska. He began his work in the Southwest in 1904 and made his last field trip, to Alaska, in 1927. He studied over eighty tribes and took 40,000 photographs. He attempted to participate as much as possible in the daily and ceremonial life of each tribe. Although not academically trained, Curtis and his assistants conducted extensive fieldwork. With his assistant, William Myers, Curtis recorded many songs (now in the University of Indiana archives) and amassed information on Indian life. Myers did most of the writing for North American Indian after the first two volumes.

The project suffered a number of delays and temporary setbacks. By 1907 Curtis' s reputation had grown and his photographs enjoyed popular success, but he was continually short of funds to cover the cost of the project. He spent the warmer months of each year in the field, photographing and conducting research with his crew, and the rest of the year raising money or promoting the project. There was a six-year lapse between the publication of volumes 11 and 12 due to delays caused by World War I. After the war public interest in Curtis' s work had waned and he gave up trying to make advance subscription sales of future volumes. In 1917, after a divorce and a loss of the Seattle studio, Curtis moved to Los Angeles and set up a new studio there. In addition to his studio work and efforts finishing up The North American Indian , Curtis pursued an interest in mining and occasionally took jobs as a cameraman on early Hollywood movies. He died on October 21, 1952, in Los Angeles.

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Historical Background

The photogravure plates were used in the printing of The North American Indian portfolio. The original photographs used to make the photogravures were made circa 1903-1926 and the photogravure plates were made in 1907-1930. The vast majority of his prints, were printed as photogravures produced for The North American Indian. Curtis used two standard sizes, 5 x 7″ (or reverse), and approximately 12 x 16″ (or reverse). He favored three hand-made papers: Japanese Vellum, Dutch “Van Gelder,” and Japanese “Tissue,” also known as India Proof Paper.

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Content Description

Original copper photogravure plates from the North American Indian portfolio by Edward Curtis.

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Other Descriptive Information

Content on this site is drawn from a historical source which includes materials that may contain offensive language reflecting racist, sexist, ethnically derogatory or other offensive biases. The images and text in this site are presented as specific, original artifacts recording the attitudes, perspectives and beliefs of a different era. They remain included as part of an honest presentation of that history and of the primary source material. The University of Washington does not endorse the views expressed in this collection which may contain text offensive to some researchers. We are working to confront bias and racism at the individual, institutional and systemic levels. Learn more about diversity and inclusion efforts at the UW.

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Use of the Collection

Restrictions on Use

Status of creator's copyrights is unknown; restrictions may exist on copying, quotation, or publication. Users are responsible for researching copyright status before use.

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Administrative Information

Arrangement

Arranged according to location in the published volumes of The North American Indian portfolio with plate numbers listed below.

Acquisition Information

Donor: Steven Kern and Kenneth Zerbe, October 21, 2021.

Processing Note

Processed by Grant Mandarino, 2022.

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Detailed Description of the Collection

 

  • Description: Spokan Camp [Several tented structures in the foreground of a wooded landscape]
    1:photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The scene is the narrow bench some hundreds of feet above the level of Spokane river, on its northern bank and a few miles above its confluence with the Columbia."

    Volume 7, plate no. 243

    Dates: 1910
    Container: Box 1, Item 1
  • Description: Umatilla Maid [Portrait of a woman in traditional attire]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "Two distinct cultural areas are represented in the costume of this damsel. The familiar beadworked, deerskin dress is an acquisition from the plains culture, while the basketry hat and the shell-bead necklace hail from the pacific slope. Note the skin of the deer's tail fastened in front at the collar, as an aid in removing the garment."

    Volume 8, plate no. 269

    Dates: 1905
    Container: Box 2, Item 2
  • Description: Innocence-Umatilla [Portrait of a child in traditional attire]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "Few aspects of Indian life are more interesting to the casual visitor than the demeanor of the children, with the coy bashfulness, their mischievous, sparkling eyes, their doubtful hesitating just the other side of friendship."

    Volume 8, plate no. 270

    Dates: 1905
    Container: Box 3, Item 3
  • Description: The Lower Columbia [Several figures and a boat on a river near a rocky outcropping]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "Text from Curtis caption: "The Columbia near its mouth spreads in a broad estuary between shores now low and flat and again bold and wooded. The conflict between winds, tides, and current sometimes raises seas that threaten even power-driven craft, and the natives who formerly swarmed in this region were necessarily clever canoemen."

    Volume 8, plate no. 286

    Dates: 1910
    Container: Box 4, Item 4
  • Description: The Middle Columbia [Figure on a boat docked on the shore of a river with rocky outcropping in foreground]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "This picture was made a few miles above the Cascades of the Columbia."

    Volume 8, plate no. 288

    Dates: 1910
    Container: Box 5, Item 5
  • Description: On Klickitat River (A) [Two figures in a boat on a river]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "Klickitat river flows through what was the territory of the Klickitat, a bold, roving, gypsy-like group of Shahaptian bands. See Volume VII, page 37. The picture, which shows one of a succession of beautiful scenes near the mouth of this stream, accompanies Volume VII for the reason that the land at its junction with the Columbia was formerly Chinookan territory, and in fact it was never altogether given up to the Klickitat."

    Volume 8, plate no. 289

    Dates: 1910
    Container: Box 6, Item 6
  • Description: On Klickitat River (B) [Two figures in a boat on a river]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 8, plate no. 290

    Dates: 1910
    Container: Box 7, Item 7
  • Description: On Klickitat River (C) [Two figures in a boat on a river]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 8, plate no. 291

    Dates: 1910
    Container: Box 8, Item 8
  • Description: On the Beach--Chinook [Portrait of an older woman standing on a sandy beach]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "An old Chinook woman with staff and clam basket makes her way slowly over the mud flats of the southern end of Shoalwater bay, in Washington. Chiih (Burden-Basket, Catherine Hawks), is one of a very few survivors of the populous tribe that formerly occupied that part of the state of Washington lying between the middle of Shoalwater bay and the Columbia."

    Volume 8, plate no. 292

    Dates: 1910
    Container: Box 9, Item 9
  • Description: The Fish Carrier-Wishham [Figure standing on the bank of a river carrying a large sack]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "From the fishing station the salmon are carried to the house, distant perhaps a quarter of a mile or more, in an open-mesh bag ("ihlkabenih") borne on the back and supported by means of a tump-line passing across the forehead."

    Volume 9, plate no. 277

    Dates: 1909
    Container: Box 10, Item 10
  • Description: The Columbia Near Wind River [Figure seated in a boat docked on the shore of a river with rock outcroppings in the foreground]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The Chinookan tribes of the Columbia obtained their canoes for the greater part from the coast tribes of Washington. The woman in the picture is the daughter of the former Cascade chief Tamahl, quoted in Volume VII, pages 26-28."

    Volume 9, plate no. 285

    Dates: 1910
    Container: Box 11, Item 11
  • Description: Quinault Female Type [Portrait of a woman in traditional attire ]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 9, plate no. 294

    Dates: 1912
    Container: Box 12, Item 12
  • Description: Basket Maker [Portrait of a seated woman making a woven basket ]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 9, plate no. 310

    Dates: 1912
    Container: Box 13, Item 13
  • Description: Basket Carrier [Portrait of an older woman carrying a woven basket on her back ]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "When a heavy burden is to be borne, the trumpline crosses the forehead and the bearer walks stooping."

    Volume 9, plate no. 311

    Dates: 1899
    Container: Box 14, Item 14
  • Description: The Tule Gatherer [Portrait of a woman next to a boat with a gathering of tule]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The manufacture of tule mats for use as carpets, house-walls, mattresses, capes, and sails is still in many localities an important duty of women."

    Volume 9, plate no. 315

    Dates: 1910
    Container: Box 15, Item 15
  • Description: Snoqualmu Type [Profile portrait of a man]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The Snoqualmu were a vigorous tribe inhabiting the watershed of Snoqualmie river, Washington."

    Volume 9, plate no. 319

    Dates: 1901
    Container: Box 16, Item 16
  • Description: Lummi Woman [Profile portrait of a woman]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 9, plate no. 321

    Dates: 1899
    Container: Box 17, Item 17
  • Description: Cowichan Warrior [Portrait of a standing man in traditional attire]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 9, plate no. 322

    Dates: 1912
    Container: Box 18, Item 18
  • Description: Cowichan Girl [Portrait of a young woman in traditional attire standing on a rock outcropping]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "A maiden of noble birth clad in goat-hair robe."

    Volume 9, plate no. 323

    Dates: 1912
    Container: Box 19, Item 19
  • Description: Spearing Salmon--Cowichan [Man on a boat with two wooden structures in a forested, mountainous landscape]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The view includes the deep slope of Tsohelim mountain and a portion of the village Henipsum at the mouth of Cowichan river, Vancouver island."

    Volume 9, plate no. 324

    Dates: 1912
    Container: Box 20, Item 20
  • Description: Cowichan Canoes [Two boats docked on the shore of a river]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The scene looks out from the mouth of Cowichan river upon Cowichan harbor."

    Volume 9, plate no. 325

    Dates: 1912
    Container: Box 21, Item 21
  • Description: Cowichan River [Docked boat on the bank of a river in a forested mountain landscape]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 9, plate no. 327

    Dates: 1912
    Container: Box 22, Item 22
  • Description: Quamichan Lake [Figure seated in a boat on a lake]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "On the shore of this beautiful lake, which is near Duncans, British Columbia, the Cowichan of Vancouver island obtain their supplies of tules."

    Volume 9, plate no. 328

    Dates: 1912
    Container: Box 23, Item 23
  • Description: Qahíla-Koprino [Close-up portrait of a man in traditional attire]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "This young chief of an almost extinct tribe resident on Quatsino sound, near the northwestern end of Vancouver island, is wearing one of the nose-ornaments formerly common among Kwakiutl nobility. The dentalium shells of which they consisted were obtained in vast numbers in certain waters of the sound. See Volume X, page 44."

    Volume 10, plate no. 331

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 24, Item 24
  • Description: Mówakiu-Tswatenok [Close-up portrait of an older man]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The Tsawatenok are an inland river tribe, depending on the sea for their sustenance much less than do most Kwakiutl tribes, and to an equal degree devoting more time to hunting and trapping in the mountains. Their territory lies along Kingcome river, at the head of the long, mainland indentation known as Kingcome inlet."

    Volume 10, plate no. 332

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 25, Item 25
  • Description: Hāmasaka in Tlüwùláhù Costume with Speaker's Staff--Qágyuhl [Portrait of a standing man in traditional attire with a carved staff]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The principal chief of the Qagyuhl is depicted in a "button blanket" (which is simply a woollen blanket ornamented with hundreds of large mother-of-pearl buttons), cedar-bark neck-ring, and cedar-bark head-band. His right hand grasps a shaman's rattle, and his left the carved staff which, as a kind of emblem of office, a man always holds when making a speech. The button designs along the edge of the blanket represent "coppers" (see page 144). The tlu'wulahu ceremony is described on page 243 of Volume."

    Volume 10, plate no. 333

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 26, Item 26
  • Description: Síwīt--Awaitlala [Close-up portrait of an older man]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 10, plate no. 335

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 27, Item 27
  • Description: On the Beach--Nakoaktok [Portrait of a figure in traditional attire standing on a beach]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "This high-born clam-digger is wearing aboriginal costume consisting of a cedar-bark blanket, used as a robe, a cedar-bark rain-cape, a spruce-root "chief's hat", and woolen ankle-bands."

    Volume 10, plate no. 339

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 28, Item 28
  • Description: Gathering Abalones--Nakoaktok [Portrait of a figure in traditional attire at work on a beach]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 10, plate no. 342

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 29, Item 29
  • Description: Quatsino Sound [Portrait of a man in traditional attire standing on a river bank next to a boat]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 10, plate no. 345

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 30, Item 30
  • Description: Yákotlūs--Quatsino (Profile) [Close-up profile portrait of an older man in tradtional attire]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "In physique and intelligence the Quatsino seem inferior to the other Kwakiutl tribes. This plate illustrates the artificial deformation of the head, which formerly was quite general on the North Pacific coast. The process is described in Volume X, page 52."

    Volume 10, plate no. 346

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 31, Item 31
  • Description: Yákotlūs--Quatsino [Close-up portrait of an older man in traditional attire]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 10, plate no. 347

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 32, Item 32
  • Description: Group of Winter Dancers--Qágyuhl [Group of performers wearing traditional costumes dancing indoors]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 10, plate no. 348

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 33, Item 33
  • Description: Nimkish Village at Alert Bay [Several buildings and traditionally carved structures in a forested landscape]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The figure at the bottom of the column in the foreground, with the painting on the front of the house, represents a raven. When a feast or a dance is to be held in this house, the guests enter through the raven's beak, the lower mandible of which swings up and down on a pivot. When a guest steps beyond the pivot, his weight caused the beak to clap shut, and thus the mythic raven symbolically "swallows" the tribesman one by one. A view from the other end of this street is shown in the illustration facing page 8, Volume X. "

    Volume 10, plate no. 350

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 34, Item 34
  • Description: Koskimo Woman [Close-up profile potrait of a woman in traditional attire]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "The head is a good illustration of the extremes to which the Quatsino Sound tribes carried the practice of artificially lengthening the skulls of their infants."

    Voume 10, plate no. 354

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 35, Item 35
  • Description: Tsúlniti--Koskimo [Profile portrait of a man in traditional attire]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 10, plate no. 363

    Dates: 1914
    Container: Box 36, Item 36
  • Description: A Makah Maiden [Close-up portrait of a young woman]
    1: photogravure plate

    Volume 11, plate no. 385

    Dates: 1915
    Container: Box 37, Item 37
  • Description: Shores of Nootka Sound [Two figures on a boat on a river in a forested mountain landscape]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "This plate conveys an excellent impression of the character of much of the Vancouver Island coast, with its rugged, tide-washed rocks, thickly timbered lowland, and lofty mountains in the distance."

    Volume 11, plate no. 389

    Dates: 1915
    Container: Box 38, Item 38
  • Description: Return of the Halibut Fishers [Several figures at work on a beach harvesting fish]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "Huge quantities of halibut are taken by the Makah at Cape Flattery, and the flesh is sliced thin and dried for storage."

    Volume 11, plate no. 393

    Dates: 1915
    Container: Box 39, Item 39
  • Description: The Whaler--Makah [Portrait of a man in traditional attire with whaling equipment]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "Note the great size of the harpoon-shaft. Indian whalers implanted the harpoon-point by thrusting, not by hurling, the weapon."

    Volume 11, plate no. 395

    Dates: 1915
    Container: Box 40, Item 40
  • Description: The Captured Whale [Two figures standing next to a whale carcass on a beach]
    1: photogravure plate

    Text from Curtis caption: "A small humpback whale (Megapter) lies partially butchered on the beach at Neah Bay."

    Volume 11, plate no. 396

    Dates: 1915
    Container: Box 41, Item 41

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Subject Terms

  • Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)
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