Learn
The man, the plates, the tribes
Edward Sheriff Curtis (1868–1952) spent thirty years documenting more than eighty Native American tribes — producing forty thousand photographs, ten thousand wax-cylinder recordings, and twenty volumes of ethnographic text. The North American Indian was funded by J.P. Morgan, prefaced by Theodore Roosevelt, and authenticated by Curtis's daughter Florence Curtis Graybill.
"The Indian as he has hitherto been is on the point of passing away. It would be a veritable calamity if a vivid and truthful record of these conditions were not kept."
From this hub:
Edward Curtis & the Project
The man, the thirty-year endeavor, the Morgan patronage, the sacrifice
How a Plate Is Made
The nine-step photogravure process — chemistry, hand work, judgment
Provenance & Authentication
Ten-step chain of ownership. Florence's letter. Smithsonian deed.
Cultural Importance
What these plates mean. George Horse Capture.
Plate Sales Data
Market record, auction prices, comparables, exhibition history
Jeanne Eder Rhodes, PhD
CurtisCamp cultural expert — enrolled Assiniboine and Sioux
The Curtis Legacy Foundation
John Graybill, the Descendants Project, and the family's continuing work
Roosevelt's Foreword
The presidential endorsement that launched the project, 1907
Camp Keeper’s Screening Room
Movies for you
Conservation
How the plates were cleaned and how they ship