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PORTRAITS
OF PRIDE AND DIGNITY SHARED WITH THE ABORIGINAL COMMUNITY
OTTAWA, December 10,
1999 - The
National Archives of Canada and the Department of Indian Affairs and
Northern Development (DIAND) are pleased to present three exhibitions: Pride
and Dignity, Returning the Gaze and Portraits by Edward
S. Curtis. They feature images of Aboriginal people in traditional
as well as community settings, which will be exhibited at Les Terrasses de
la Chaudière, in Hull, from December 16, 1999 until December 31, 2001.
The over one hundred
photographs in Pride and Dignity, Returning the Gaze and
Portraits by Edward S. Curtis reveal a rich visual Aboriginal
history. The photos were reproduced from originals taken as early as the
1840's, which are part of the vast photographic collection in the National
Archives. Although it is the more popular chief and warrior icons which hold
people’s attention, these exhibitions present a balance between the
stereotypical photographs and those of Aboriginal people in their everyday
activities, which give a greater sense of time and place. They include
photographs by Edward S. Curtis, known for his epic 20-volume photographic
project The North American Indian, and others by lesser-known
photographers who recorded daily life in Aboriginal communities.
Whatever their source,
these photographs are important to the present day Aboriginal community.
"Today Aboriginal people have entered an era of positive
self-determination but often know little of their photographic history and
of Aboriginal life in the era before reserves. Part of this movement
involves taking control of their past, documented in records held in
archival repositories. The interpretation and use of archival records by
Aboriginal people initiates a process of restoration of pride in their
past," says Jeffrey Thomas, guest curator of the show. Thomas, who is
of Onondaga ancestry, is also well known as a photographer.
Except for holiday
closings December 27-28, 1999 and January 3, 2000, Pride and Dignity,
Returning the Gaze and Portraits by Edward S. Curtis
may be viewed starting December 16, 1999, from 7 a.m. to 6 p.m., Monday
through Friday, in the lobby of Les Terrasses de la Chaudière, located at
10 Wellington Street in Hull. You can also preview some of the images of Pride
and Dignity on the National Archives Web site (http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/aboriginal-portraits/index-e.html)
under Exhibitions.
Components of these
exhibitions will also travel to other venues across Canada and be exhibited
in some of the DIAND’s regional centers, thanks to the partnership between
the National Archives and the DIAND. It is one of many initiatives which the
National Archives has undertaken in an effort to make its holdings more
accessible and bring to Canadians more of their own stories.
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For more information
please contact:
Pauline Portelance
Media Relations Officer
Telephone: (613) 996-6128
E-mail: media@lac-bac.gc.ca
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