Native America Nude Gallery
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Tlingit dagger, Northwest Alaska, circa 1850from The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
culturallywild: Native of Latin America. The Orinoco River, Venezuela. Photograph by D.G. Copyrigh
culturallywild: Native of Latin America. The Orinoco River, Venezuela. Photograph by D.G. Copyrigh
Taíno stone yoke, used as a ball-game accessory (Puerto Rico, 1200– 1500 AD).Techniques used: pecked
figdays: b.yellowtail “We are a Native American owned fashion & accessories brand that special
Native Americans with Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Show set up teepees in the Colosseum. Rome, ci
From Paste Magazine’s 10 Underrated Queer Books That Everyone Should Read:5. The Man Who Fell in Lov
Gunsmoke: Indian Trouble
“Let him go!”
Here’s a little BLUESDAY inspiration from our Arts of the Americas collection, currently on view in
Our upcoming exhibition, Climate in Crisis: Environmental Change in the Indigenous Americas, looks a
If you ask someone to name five artists, they will likely name prominent male artists, but how many
Here’s a little BLUESDAY inspiration from our Arts of the Americas collection, currently on view in
“In this evocative and complicated gallery I have placed PUSH (2018) at the far end near the Native
Painted pot depicting horned serpents and birds, of the Mogollon culture, southwestern United States
Hopi ceramic tiles. Artist unknown; ca. 1895. Now in the Heard Museum, Phoenix, AZ.
Navajo banded rug, ca. 1880. Now in the Cleveland Museum of Art.
Raven rattle of the Tlingit people, from Fort Wrangell, Alaska. Artist unknown; late 19th century.
Yunya (prickly pear cactus) kachina of the Hopi people, Arizona. Now in the Honolulu Museum of Art.
Anasazi water jar (olla) from the southwestern United States. Artist unknown; ca. 1100-1250. Now i
Here’s a little BLUESDAY inspiration from our Arts of the Americas collection, currently on view in
oupacademic:“Against Indian resistance, professional buffalo hunters moved onto the southern p
thefrankshow:“Bear Bull” Blackfoot, by Edward S. Curtis
Kachina dolls are used by the Pueblo people to teach children about spiritual beliefs and were hung
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