Edward Sheriff Curtis
Edward Sheriff Curtis (February 16, 1868 – October 19, 1952) was a photographer of the American West and of Native American peoples.
Early life
Edward Curtis was born near Whitewater, Wisconsin.Curtis'
father, Rev. Johnson Asahel Curtis (1840-1887), was a minister and a American
Civil War veteran. Rev. Curtis was born in Ohio. Rev. Curtis' father was born
in Canada, and his mother in Vermont. Edward's mother, Ellen Sheriff (1844-1912),
was born in Pennsylvania; and both her parents were born in England. Curtis'
siblings were Raphael Curtis (1862-c1885), who also was called Ray Curtis;
Eva Curtis (1870-?); and Asahel Curtis (1875-1941).
Around 1874 the family moved from Wisconsin to Minnesota, and Curtis built his own camera. In 1880 the family was living in Cordova Township, Minnesota, where Johnson Curtis was working as a retail grocer.
Early
career
In 1885 at the age of seventeen Edward became an apprentice photographer in
St. Paul, Minnesota. In 1887 the family moved to Seattle, Washington, where
Edward purchased a new camera and became a partner in an existing photographic
studio with Rasmus Rothi. Edward paid $150 for his 50 percent share in the
studio. After about six months, Curtis left Rothi and formed a new partnership
with Thomas Guptill. The new studio was called Curtis and Guptill, Photographers
and Photoengravers.
Marriage
In 1892 Edward married Clara J. Phillips (1874-1932), who was born in Pennsylvania.
Her parents were from Canada. Together they had four children: Harold Curtis
(1893-?); Elizabeth M. (Beth) Curtis (1896-1973), who married Manford E. Magnuson
(1895-1993); Florence Curtis (1899-1987) who married Henry Graybill (1893-?);
and Katherine (Billy) Curtis (1909-?).
In 1896 the entire family moved to a new house in Seattle. The household then included Edward's mother, Ellen Sheriff; Edward's sister, Eva Curtis; Edward's brother, Asahel Curtis; Clara's sisters, Susie and Nellie Phillips; and Nellie's son, William.
Middle career

Princess Angeline in an 1896 photograph by Edward Sheriff Curtis
In 1895 Curtis met and photographed Princess Angeline (c1800-1896) aka Kickisomlo, the daughter of Chief Sealth of Seattle. This was to be his first portrait of a Native American. In 1898 while photographing Mt. Rainier, Curtis came upon a small group of scientists. One of them was George Bird Grinnell, an expert on Native Americans. Both Grinnell and Curtis were invited on the famous Harriman Alaska Expedition in 1899. Grinnell became interested in Curtis' photography and invited him to join an expedition to photograph the Blackfeet Indians in Montana in the year 1900.
The North American
Indian

North American Indian 1907
In 1906 J.P. Morgan offered Curtis $75,000 to produce a series on the North American Indian. It was to be in 20 volumes with 1,500 photographs. Morgan was to receive 25 sets and 500 original prints as his method of repayment. 222 complete sets were eventually published. Curtis' goal was not just to photograph, but to document, as much American Indian (Native American) traditional life as possible before that way of life disappeared. He wrote in the introduction to his first volume in 1907: "The information that is to be gathered ... respecting the mode of life of one of the great races of mankind, must be collected at once or the opportunity will be lost." Curtis made over 10,000 wax cylinder recordings of Indian language and music. He took over 40,000 photographic images from over 80 tribes. He recorded tribal lore and history, and he described traditional foods, housing, garments, recreation, ceremonies, and funeral customs. He wrote biographical sketches of tribal leaders, and his material, in most cases, is the only recorded history.
Divorce
In 1910 the family was living in Seattle and on October 16, 1916, Clara filed
for divorce. In 1919 she was granted the divorce and received the Curtis'
photographic studio and all of his original camera negatives as her part of
the settlement. Edward went with his daughter, Beth, to the studio and destroyed
all of his original glass negatives, rather than have them become the property
of his ex-wife, Clara. Clara went on to manage the Curtis studio with her
sister, Nellie M. Phillips (1880-?), who was married to Martin Lucus (1880-?).
In 1920 Beth Curtis and her sister Florence Curtis were living in a boarding
house in Seattle. Clara was living in Charleston, Kitsap County, Washington
with her sister Nellie and her daughter Katherine Curtis.
Hollywood

Indian Days Of Long Ago 1915
Around 1922 Curtis moved to Los Angeles with his daughter Beth, and opened a new photo studio. To earn money he worked as an assistant cameraman for Cecil B. DeMille and was an uncredited assistant cameraman in the 1923 filming of The Ten Commandments. On October 16, 1924 Curtis sold the rights to his ethnographic motion picture In the Land of the Head-Hunters to the American Museum of Natural History. He was paid $1,500 for the master print and the original camera negative. It had cost him over $20,000 to film.
Decline
In 1927 after returning from Alaska to Seattle with his daughter Beth, he
was arrested for failure to pay alimony over the preceding 7 years. The total
owed was $4,500, but the charges were dropped. For Christmas of 1927, the
family was reunited at daughter Florence's home in Medford, Oregon. This was
the first time since the divorce that Curtis was with all of his children
at the same time, and it had been thirteen years since he had seen Katherine.
In 1928, desperate for cash, Edward sold the rights to his project to J.P
Morgan's son. In 1930 he published the concluding volume of The North American
Indian. In total about 280 sets were sold of his now completed opus magnum.
In 1930 his ex-wife, Clara, was still living in Seattle operating the photo
studio with their daughter Katherine. His other daughter, Florence Curtis,
was still living in Medford, Oregon with her husband Henry Graybill. In 1932
his ex wife, Clara, drowned while rowing in Puget Sound, and his daughter,
Katherine moved to California to be closer to her father and her sister, Beth.
Loss of rights
to The North American Indian
In 1935 the rights and remaining unpublished material were sold by the Morgan
estate to the Charles E. Lauriat Company in Boston for $1,000 plus a percentage
of any future royalties. This included 19 complete bound sets of The North
American Indian, thousands of individual paper prints, the copper printing
plates, the unbound printed pages, and the original glass-plate negatives.
Lauriat bound the remaining loose printed pages and sold them with the completed
sets. The remaining material remained untouched in the Lauriat basement in
Boston until they were rediscovered in 1972.
Death and burial

On October 19, 1952,
at the age of 84, Curtis died of a heart attack in Whittier, California in
the home of his daughter, Beth. He was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park
in Hollywood Hills, California. His terse obituary appeared in The New York
Times on October 20, 1952:
Edward S. Curtis, internationally known authority on the history of the North
American Indian, died today at the home of a daughter, Mrs. Bess Magnuson.
His age was 84. Mr. Curtis devoted his life to compiling Indian history. His
research was done under the patronage of the late financier, J. Pierpont Morgan.
The foreward [sic] for the monumental set of Curtis books was written by President
Theodore Roosevelt. Mr. Curtis was also widely known as a photographer
Curtis archive
at the Library of Congress
The Prints and Photographs Division Curtis collection consists of more than
2,400 silver-gelatin, first generation photographic prints — some of
which are sepia-toned — made from Curtis's original glass negatives.
Most of the photographic prints are 5" x 7" although nearly 100
are 11" x 14" and larger; many include the Curtis file or negative
number within the image at the lower left-hand corner. Acquired by the Library
of Congress through copyright deposit from about 1900 through 1930, the dates
on the images reflect date of registration, not when the photograph was actually
taken. About two-thirds (1,608) of these images were not published in the
North American Indian volumes and therefore offer a different and unique glimpse
into Curtis's work with indigenous cultures. The original glass plate negatives
which had been stored and nearly forgotten in the basement of New York's Pierpont
Morgan Library were dispersed during World War II. Many others were destroyed
and some were sold as junk.
Charles Lauriat
archive
Around 1970, Karl Kernberger of Santa Fe, New Mexico went to Boston to search
for Curtis' original copper plates and photogravures at the Charles E. Lauriat
rare bookstore. He discovered almost 285,000 original photogravures as well
as all the original copper plates. With Jack Loeffler and David Padwa, they
jointly purchased all of the surviving Curtis material that was owned by Charles
Emelius Lauriat (1874-1937). The collection was later purchased by another
group of investors led by Mark Zaplin of Santa Fe. The Zaplin Group owned
the plates until 1982, when they sold them to a California group led by Kenneth
Zerbe, the current owner of the plates as of 2005.
Peabody Essex
Museum
Dr. Charles Goddard Weld purchased 110 prints that Curtis had made for his
1905-1906 exhibit and donated them to the Peabody Essex Museum, where they
remain. The 14" by 17" prints are each unique and remain in pristine
condition. Clark Worswick, curator of photography for the museum, describes
them as:
"...Curtis' most carefully selected prints of what was then his life’s
work...certainly these are some of the most glorious prints ever made in the
history of the photographic medium. The fact that we have this man’s
entire show of 1906 is one of the minor miracles of photography and museology."
Controversy

Little Plume with his son Yellow Kidney occupies the position of honor, the space at the rear opposite the entrance. Compare with the unretouched original below.

Unretouched original of the image above. Note the clock between Little Plume and Yellow Kidney.
Curtis has been praised as a gifted photographer but also criticized by professional ethnologists for manipulating his images. Curtis' photographs have been charged with misrepresenting Native American people and cultures by portraying them in the popular notions and stereotypes of the times. Although the early twentieth century was a difficult time for most Native communities in America, not all natives were doomed to becoming a "vanishing race." At a time when natives' rights were being denied and their treaties were unrecognized by the federal government, many natives were successfully adapting to western society. By reinforcing the native identity as the noble savage and a tragic vanishing race, some believe Curtis detracted attention from the true plight of American natives at the time when he was witnessing their squalid conditions on reservations first-hand and their attempt to find their place in Western culture and adapt to their changing world.
In many of his images Curtis removed parasols, suspenders, wagons, and other traces of Western and material culture from his pictures. In his photogravure In a Piegan Lodge, published in The North American Indian, Curtis retouched the image to remove a clock between the two men seated on the ground.
He also is known to have paid natives to pose in staged scenes, wear historically inaccurate dress and costumes, dance and partake in simulated ceremonies.
In Curtis' picture Oglala
War-Party, the image shows 10 Oglala men wearing feather headdresses, on horseback
riding down hill. The photo caption reads, "a group of Sioux warriors
as they appeared in the days of inter tribal warfare, carefully making their
way down a hillside in the vicinity of the enemy's camp." In truth headdresses
would have only been worn during special occasions and, in some tribes, only
by the chief of the tribe. The photograph was taken in 1907 when natives had
been relegated onto reservations and warring between tribes had ended. Curtis
paid natives to pose as warriors at a time when they lived with little dignity,
rights, and freedoms. It is therefore suggested that he altered and manipulated
his pictures to create an ethnographic simulation of Native tribes untouched
by Western society.
One of the more balanced reviews of The North American Indian comes from Mick
Gidley, Emeritus Professor of American Literature, at Leeds University, in
England, who has written a number of works related to the life of Edward S.
Curtis: "The North American Indian-extensively produced and issued in
a severely limited edition-could not prove popular. But in recent years anthropologists
and others, even when they have censured what they have assumed were Curtis'
methodological assumptions or quarrelled with the text's conclusions, have
begun to appreciate the value of the project's achievement: exhibitions have
been mounted, anthologies of pictures have been published, and The North American
Indian has increasingly been cited in the researches of others... The
North American Indian is not monolithic or merely a monument. It is alive,
it speaks, if with several voices, and among those perhaps mingled voices
are those of otherwise silent or muted Indian individuals.”
Of the full Curtis opus N. Scott Momaday says: “Taken as a whole,
the work of Edward S. Curtis is a singular achievement. Never before have
we seen the Indians of North America so close to the origins of their humanity...Curtis’
photographs comprehend indispensable images of every human being at every
time in every place”
Don Gulbrandsen, who wrote Edward Sheriff Curtis: Visions of the First Americans,
puts it this way in his introductory essay on Curtis’ life: “The
faces stare out at you, images seemingly from an ancient time and from a place
far, far away…Yet as you gaze at the faces the humanity becomes apparent,
lives filled with dignity but also sadness and loss, representatives of a
world that has all but disappeared from our planet.”
In Shadow Catcher: The Life and Work of Edward S. Curtis, Laurie Lawlor reveals
that “many Native Americans Curtis photographed called him Shadow
Catcher. But the images he captured were far more powerful than mere shadows.
The men, women, and children in The North American Indian seem as alive to
us today as they did when Curtis took their pictures in the early part of
the twentieth century. Curtis respected the Indians he encountered and was
willing to learn about their culture, religion and way of life. In return
the Indians respected and trusted him. When judged by the standards of his
time, Curtis was far ahead of his contemporaries in sensitivity, tolerance,
and openness to Native American cultures and ways of thinking.”
Theodore Roosevelt, who was one of Curtis' contemporaries and one of his most
strident supporters, wrote the following comments in the foreword to Volume
I of The North American Indian: "In Mr. Curtis we have both an artist
and a trained observer, whose work has far more than mere accuracy, because
it is truthful. …because of his extraordinary success in making and
using his opportunities, has been able to do what no other man ever has done;
what, as far as we can see, no other man could do. Mr. Curtis in publishing
this book is rendering a real and great service; a service not only to our
own people, but to the world of scholarship everywhere."
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