Native American Paintings Of Women
April 30th, 2010
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GIL ELVGREN: MASTER OF PIN-UPS
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Classic Native American Culture Films: Navajo & Pueblo Indians History $12.99 This is a compilation of old rare Native American and American Indian 16mm films that have been digitized and collected onto DVD. You can’t find this DVD anywhere else, because we designed it ourselves! It’s a must for Native American educators, enthusiasts or collectors. Table Of Contents: (1) The Pueblo Heritage (1950) – This is a fantastic film about the history of the Pueblo people. There is w… |
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Native American Culture and History: Amateur Old West DVD (1920s) $4.99 This film reel contains rare amateur footage of Southwest American life in the early twentieth century. Despite the fact that the exact date and location of the film is unknown, it is likely that most of the scenes are from New Mexico, with some ending shots of the Grand Canyon and California. The beginning scenes appear to be of the Palace of the Governors in Santa Fe. This film focuses especiall… |
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The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses $1.99 For most people, being swept away in a horse stampede during a raging thunderstorm would be a terrifying disaster. For the young Native American girl in Paul Goble’s 1979 Caldecott-winning masterpiece, The Girl Who Loved Wild Horses, it is a blessing. Although she loves her people, this girl has a much deeper, almost sacred connection to her equine friends. The storm gives her the opportunit… |
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Independent Spirits: Women Painters of the American West, 1890-1945 $14.00 Independent Spirits brings to vivid life the West as seen through the eyes of women painters from 1890 to the end of World War II. Expert scholars and curators identify long-lost talent and reveal how these women were formidable cultural innovators as well as agitators for the rights of artists and women during a period of extraordinary development.Abundantly illustrated, with over one-hundred col… |
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Wiping the War Paint off the Lens: Native American Film and Video (Visible Evidence) $17.55 Native Americans have thrown themselves into filmmaking since the mid-1970s, producing hundreds of films and videos, and their body of work has had great impact on Native cultures and filmmaking itself. With their cameras, they capture the lives of Native people, celebrating community, ancestral lifeways, and identity. Not only artistic statements, the films are archives that document rich and com… |