Showing posts with label Frank Rinehart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frank Rinehart. Show all posts

Thursday, January 19, 2017

Frank Rinehart

 Band of Sioux warriors
  
 Fox of Iowa, Bead Work
  
 Hattie Tom, Chiricahua Apache
  
 In Summer, Kiowa
  
Kiowas, 1898

Saturday, August 27, 2016

Frank Rinehart

Like his better-known contemporary Edward S. Curtis, Frank Rinehart made sensitive portraits of Native American people. Rinehart, a commercial photographer in Omaha, Nebraska, was commissioned to photograph the 1898 Indian Congress, part of the Trans-Mississippi International Exposition. More than five hundred Native Americans from thirty-five tribes attended the conference, providing the gifted photographer and artist an opportunity to create a stunning visual document of Native American life and culture at the dawn of the 20th century. Although the portraits are posed and artistically lighted in his studio, they have a candid intimacy that allows his subjects individuality and dignity, a quality not shared by most 19th-century ethnographic photography.

 Antoine Moise, Flathead
  
 Chief Wolf Robe, Cheyenne
  
 Cloud Man, Assinaboine
  
 Four Bull, Assinaboine
   
Freckled Face, Arapahoe
 
 Kiowas