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University of California Press

Painting Indians and Building Empires in North America, 1710–1840


by William H. Truettner (Author)
Price: $85.00 / £71.00
Publication Date: Sep 2010
Edition: 1st Edition
Title Details:
Rights: World
Pages: 176
ISBN: 9780520266315
Trim Size: 6 x 9
Illustrations: 18 b/w photographs and 55 color illustrations
Endowments:

About the Book

The Europeans who first settled North America were endlessly intrigued by the indigenous people they found there; even before the colonials began to record the landscape, they drew and painted Indians. This study offers a new visual perspective on westward expansion through a survey of the major Indian images painted by Euro-American artists before and after the American Revolution. William H. Truettner's accessible readings of paintings by artists such as Benjamin West, Gilbert Stuart, Charles Bird King, and George Catlin relate these images to social and political events of the time and tell us much about how North American tribes would fare as they fought to survive during the second half of the nineteenth century.

About the Author

William H. Truettner is Senior Curator of Painting and Sculpture at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Reviews

“Truettner has produced a scholarly work of enduring value that should be in all academic and museum libraries.”
Arlis/Na Reviews
“[A] tight and carefully argued book.”
Choice
“Overall, Painting Indians offers an engaging assessment of how artists memorialized the past, rather than strengthened the future, of societies falsely predicted to become ‘vanishing races.’”
Great Plains Qtly
"An instant classic! Demonstrating how depictions of Native Americans as Noble Savages and Republican Indians furthered British and American imperial aims, William Truettner brilliantly illuminates a hitherto uncharted history."—Alan Wallach, author of Exhibiting Contradiction: Essays on the Art Museum in the United States

"In his thought-provoking study of 18th and early 19th century images of native American sitters, Truettner distinguishes between the mythical 'noble savage' and the 19th century 'republican Indian' with great success, raising issues about the purposes of the images, their commissions, their audiences, and their role in inter-cultural relations."—Ellen G. Miles, co-author of Gilbert Stuart