In Citizen's Garb: Southern Plains Native Americans, 1889-1891
- WHEN:
- Sat. 09/15 | 7:00PM - Tue. 01/06
- WHERE:
- Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum, 1800 Congress Avenue map
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The 1880's and 1890's were decades of tremendous upheaval for many native peoples in Texas. Numerous Indian reservations were opened in the Oklahoma and Indian Territories during this time and large-scale efforts were made to force the Native Peoples to adopt Euro-American ways. In Citizen’s Garb: Southern Plains Native Americans, 1885–1891, explores how dress – and life – changed for the Kiowa and Comanche tribes as they gradually adjusted to the new life forced upon them by the United States government.
Images of Native Americans in both citizen and native dress reflect the transition occurring between the tribes’ past and their radically different future. Other details are more subtle: a tipi constructed of store-bought canvas rather than of animal hides, for example, reflects a significant change in the material culture of the Native Peoples. The exhibition is curated by John Hernandez, Director of the Museum of
the Great Plains in Lawton, Oklahoma, and is organized by the Museum of the Great Plains.
Tickets: $5.50/Adults, $4.50/Seniors(65+), $3/Youth(5-18), Free/Members
Dates: September 15, 2007-January 6, 2008
Times:
Monday-Saturday 9:00am-6:00pm, Sunday 12:00pm-6:00pm
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In the decades between 1880 and 1900, American Indians underwent significant cultural transformations as a result of European settlers who thrust them into reservations and Euro-American customs. During this period, William J. Lenny and William L. Sawyers opened a photo studio in Purcell, Okla., near the reservations, and photographed American Indians in both their traditional dress and the current fashions of the time.read more at austin360.com
about 1 year ago.