Posts Tagged Labor and Female Bonding

Tribal Dresses, Stories, Labor and Female Bonding

Dec 2nd, 2008 Posted in NATIVE ART | Comments Off

By KAREN ROSENBERG
Published: October 7, 2008

Most of us get dressed in the morning with only the vaguest notion of where the clothes on our backs come from. A 19th-century American Indian woman could tell you exactly who had hunted the animals from which her dress was taken. She would know who had tanned the hides, stitched them together and sewed hundreds of beads onto them, and what the pattern of those beads signified.

VIEW SLIDE SHOW OF BEAUTIFUL FEMALE NATIVE OUTFITS

Walter Larrimore/Smithsonian’s National Museum of The American Indian

“Identity by Design” at the New York branch of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, includes a powwow dress, above.

More than 50 of these dresses are on view in “Identity by Design: Tradition, Change and Celebration in Native Women’s Dresses,” at the New York branch of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian. These are heavy garments, and not just because they are dripping with beads, coins and other ornaments. Each is weighted with the circumstance and life story of the woman who wore it, as well as the history of her tribe.

The show takes the form of a loose, informal conversation among the curators, Colleen Cutschall and Emil Her Many Horses, and six Indian women who are respected dressmakers. The wall text consists almost entirely of quotations from these artists. Their reminiscences and musings are sometimes cloying, but the absence of pedagogy is refreshing.

“Identity by Design” also challenges the stereotype of

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