Details

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Collection: 00086 - Paul Ewald Photograph Collection
Folder: 0035
Item: 01401
Title: Bear's Teeth performs a Arikara ritual at the Sacred Cedar outside a medicine lodge
Date: 1908
Creator: Curtis, Edward S.,--1868-1952
Inscription/Marks: On the back: col. 86-1401, "116", "21", "Albert Simpson' struck out, and "Old Man Bear's Teeth".
Summary: In regalia linked to the medicine of the Nights, a fraternity of Arikara men, Bear's Teeth sings and uses a rattle as he performs a ceremony at the base of the Sacred Cedar. A red painted rock with a band of light painted at the midsection is properly placed beside the Sacred Cedar; both play important symbolic parts in the ceremonies of the Arikara. Bear's Teeth or KuuNUxaánu’ was an Arikara Chief born around 1881. His torso in this ceremony is painted with vertical stripes and the lower half of his face is painted . He wears a headdress with a single feather, a leather apron over fringed and quilled leggings and moccasins. A tipi is at one side of the field behind him, a corral and log structure to the right. This sacred ceremony was photographed by Edward S. Curtis in 1908 on the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation. Many of these images were published with accompanying descriptive text in Volume 5 of his famous 20 volume series of "The North American Indian".
Red ID: PH_I_146196 Image ID: 90249 Image Notes: 00086-01401-back

Collection: 00086 Digitized Images from Collection
Title: Paul Ewald Photograph Collection
Date: 1875-Circa 1960

Summary: Consists of prints and some copy negatives of several photographers on the Fort Berthold Reservation, primarily Gilbert L. Wilson, and also including Frances Densmore, Frank Fiske, Fred Olson, Sumner Matteson, and several unidentified photographers. Ewald wrote identification of many photographs in his collection based upon suggestions from the people of Fort Berthold. Images include celebrations and gatherings, dances, sweat lodges, Little Missouri camps, cradles, portraits, Buffalo Bird Woman, Wolf Chief, Goodbird, Indian crafts and skills, artifacts, wood gathering, gardening, food processing and cooking, earth lodges, bullboats, travois, and Indian cowboys.

This image may be restricted. Contact reference staff for assistance.
Collection: 00086 - Paul Ewald Photograph Collection
Folder: 0035
Item: 01401
Title: Bear's Teeth performs a Arikara ritual at the Sacred Cedar outside a medicine lodge
Date: 1908
Creator: Curtis, Edward S.,--1868-1952
Inscription/Marks: On the back: col. 86-1401, "116", "21", "Albert Simpson' struck out, and "Old Man Bear's Teeth".
Summary: In regalia linked to the medicine of the Nights, a fraternity of Arikara men, Bear's Teeth sings and uses a rattle as he performs a ceremony at the base of the Sacred Cedar. A red painted rock with a band of light painted at the midsection is properly placed beside the Sacred Cedar; both play important symbolic parts in the ceremonies of the Arikara. Bear's Teeth or KuuNUxaánu’ was an Arikara Chief born around 1881. His torso in this ceremony is painted with vertical stripes and the lower half of his face is painted . He wears a headdress with a single feather, a leather apron over fringed and quilled leggings and moccasins. A tipi is at one side of the field behind him, a corral and log structure to the right. This sacred ceremony was photographed by Edward S. Curtis in 1908 on the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation. Many of these images were published with accompanying descriptive text in Volume 5 of his famous 20 volume series of "The North American Indian".
Red ID: PH_I_146196 Image ID: 96018 Image Notes: 00086-01401

Collection: 00086 Digitized Images from Collection
Title: Paul Ewald Photograph Collection
Date: 1875-Circa 1960

Summary: Consists of prints and some copy negatives of several photographers on the Fort Berthold Reservation, primarily Gilbert L. Wilson, and also including Frances Densmore, Frank Fiske, Fred Olson, Sumner Matteson, and several unidentified photographers. Ewald wrote identification of many photographs in his collection based upon suggestions from the people of Fort Berthold. Images include celebrations and gatherings, dances, sweat lodges, Little Missouri camps, cradles, portraits, Buffalo Bird Woman, Wolf Chief, Goodbird, Indian crafts and skills, artifacts, wood gathering, gardening, food processing and cooking, earth lodges, bullboats, travois, and Indian cowboys.

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