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Art Blackburn
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Home
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Native American Photography Roland W. Reed "The Wood Gatherer"
1460-Roland-W Reed-Wood-Gatherer-Native-American-Photography-Art-Blackburn-1.jpg Image 1 of 2
1460-Roland-W Reed-Wood-Gatherer-Native-American-Photography-Art-Blackburn-1.jpg
1460-Roland-W Reed-Wood-Gatherer-Native-American-Photography-Art-Blackburn-2.jpg Image 2 of 2
1460-Roland-W Reed-Wood-Gatherer-Native-American-Photography-Art-Blackburn-2.jpg
1460-Roland-W Reed-Wood-Gatherer-Native-American-Photography-Art-Blackburn-1.jpg
1460-Roland-W Reed-Wood-Gatherer-Native-American-Photography-Art-Blackburn-2.jpg

Roland W. Reed "The Wood Gatherer"

$450.00

Image size 8” x 12 1/2” on cream colored paper 14” x 18”

Provenance: Utah Trade

Roland (Royal Jr.) W. Reed (June 22, 1864 – December 14, 1934), an American artist and photographer, was part of an early 20th century group of photographers of Native Americans known as pictorialists.

Pictorialists were influenced by the late 19th Century art movement, Impressionism, and their photography was characterized by an emphasis on lighting and focus. Rather than record an image as it was, pictorialists were more interested in re-creating an image as they thought it might have been. Part artist and part scientist, they endeavored to have their re-creations reflect not only the highest artistic value, but unquestioned ethnologicalaccuracy as well. At the beginning of the 20th century a number of pictorialists, noticing the extremely deleterious impact of reservation life on Native Americans, wanted to recreate in photographs the Indian’s life and ways as they had been in better times, rather than record how it had actually become.

INQUIRE HERE

Purchase

Image size 8” x 12 1/2” on cream colored paper 14” x 18”

Provenance: Utah Trade

Roland (Royal Jr.) W. Reed (June 22, 1864 – December 14, 1934), an American artist and photographer, was part of an early 20th century group of photographers of Native Americans known as pictorialists.

Pictorialists were influenced by the late 19th Century art movement, Impressionism, and their photography was characterized by an emphasis on lighting and focus. Rather than record an image as it was, pictorialists were more interested in re-creating an image as they thought it might have been. Part artist and part scientist, they endeavored to have their re-creations reflect not only the highest artistic value, but unquestioned ethnologicalaccuracy as well. At the beginning of the 20th century a number of pictorialists, noticing the extremely deleterious impact of reservation life on Native Americans, wanted to recreate in photographs the Indian’s life and ways as they had been in better times, rather than record how it had actually become.

INQUIRE HERE

Image size 8” x 12 1/2” on cream colored paper 14” x 18”

Provenance: Utah Trade

Roland (Royal Jr.) W. Reed (June 22, 1864 – December 14, 1934), an American artist and photographer, was part of an early 20th century group of photographers of Native Americans known as pictorialists.

Pictorialists were influenced by the late 19th Century art movement, Impressionism, and their photography was characterized by an emphasis on lighting and focus. Rather than record an image as it was, pictorialists were more interested in re-creating an image as they thought it might have been. Part artist and part scientist, they endeavored to have their re-creations reflect not only the highest artistic value, but unquestioned ethnologicalaccuracy as well. At the beginning of the 20th century a number of pictorialists, noticing the extremely deleterious impact of reservation life on Native Americans, wanted to recreate in photographs the Indian’s life and ways as they had been in better times, rather than record how it had actually become.

INQUIRE HERE

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