Her-Loo-A-Lah. Mujer Apache, posando con cántaros de sauce y palanganas tejidas. Fotografía tomada por Gentry, pho. en 1908.
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Her-Loo-A-Lah. Mujer Apache, posando con cántaros de sauce y palanganas tejidas. Fotografía tomada por Gentry, pho. en 1908.
AMERICA: Open Your Eyes
Made in 2015. I found this poster in Globe, AZ. Native people know racism too well. We’ve battled it for over 500 years. Propaganda is a tool war machines use to create fear and psychologically destabilize countries. Sadly we are in a new age of propaganda and open racism. This piece tells how Natives have seen institutional racism operate since day one. Ironically the original poster was to show the insidious and hidden nature of fascism via the Nazis in Germany during WWII and how it could affect America. The Native perspective isn’t non-existent, it’s just semi-invisible until you make and share art that is about something affecting your tribes, nations and people. This original art debuted in show this at the Allan Houser Gallery in Santa Fe, NM titled “ The Art of Apache Resistance” . A bold move and very fitting since Allan’s Father was a Chiricahua Apache fighter on the war trail with Geronimo.
Guerreros Apaches. De izquierda a derecha: Ma-si (explorador Chiricahua), Apache Kid y Rowdy. Fotografía tomada por Camillus S. Fly, en 1886.
Esh-kin-tsay-giza (Mike). Apache White Mountain de la banda de Al-chi-say [Alchise]. Fotografía tomada por Charles S. Baker y Eli Johnston, alrededor de 1885.
Campamento Apache, Río San Carlos, Arizona. Niños y hombres Apaches San Carlos fuera de sus wickiups, en un campamento a orillas del Río San Carlos, Arizona. Fotografía tomada por George Ben Wittick entre 1880 - 1890. Actualmente la Reserva India de los Apaches San Carlos abarca 1,8 millón de hectáreas de tierras vírgenes extendidas a través de tres regiones de territorio de montaña, desierto y paisajes de la meseta. Los Apaches son descendientes de la familia Athabascana, que emigró hacia el suroeste en el Siglo X. Más tarde, cuando se iban estableciendo las reservas, las bandas de Apaches que fueron colocadas en San Carlos, se convirtieron en una tribu reconocida como "the San Carlos Apache" (los Apaches San Carlos). Hoy en día, la Reserva de los Apaches San Carlos es el hogar de aproximadamente 12.000 Apaches, con una abundancia de recursos naturales y un rico patrimonio cultural.
Madre Apache e hijo. Fotografía tomada por Smithers Campbell a principios de 1900.
The approach could be replicated in other U.S. cities