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Introduction | Purses | Moccasins | Novelties | Regalia | Contemporary |
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Bibliography for Brilliantly Beaded: Northeastern Native American Beadwork, Griselda
and June Bedford, Jonathan King, Ruth Whitehead, Geoffrey Turner.
Mohawk, Micmac, Maliseet... and other Indian Souvenir Art from Victorian
Canada. London: Canada House Cultural Center, 1985. Eckstorm,
Fannie Hardy. The Handicrafts of the Modern Indians of
Maine. Bar Harbor, Maine: Robert Abbe Museum, 1980. Ford,
Tom Raven. Indian Double Curve Secrets: Eastern Woodlands
Guide for Stencils. Brunswick, Maine: Audenreed Press, 1997. Lester,
Joan A. We're Still Here: Art of Indian New England / The
Children's Museum Collection. Boston: The Children's Museum, 1987.
Monroe,
Dan L., ed. Gifts of the Spirit: Works by Nineteenth-Century
and Contemporary Native American Artists. Salem, Massachusetts:
Peabody Essex Museum, 1996. Pelletier,
Gaby, ed. Micmac and Maliseet Decorative Traditions: A
Catalogue Featuring a Selection of Maliseet and Micmac Decorative Arts
from the Collections of the New Brunswick Museum. Saint John: The
New Brunswick Museum, 1977. Phillips,
Ruth B. and Dale Idiens. " 'A Casket of Savage Curiosities':
Eighteenth-century Objects from North-eastern North America in the Farquharson
Collection." Journal of the History of Collections, Volume
6, Number 1. London: Oxford Press, 1944. Speck,
Frank. Penobscot Man. Orono, Maine: University of
Maine Press, 1977. Speck,
Frank. "Symbolism in Penobscot Art." Anthropological
Papers of the American Museum of Natural History, Volume XXIX, Part
II. New York: The American Museum of Natural History, 1927. Whitehead,
Ruth Holmes. "A Brief Glimpse of Micmac Life: Objects
from the McCord Collection.Wrapped in the Colours of the Earth:
Cultural Heritage of the First Nations. Montreal: McCord Museum
of Canadian History, 1992. Whitehead, Ruth Holmes. Elitekey: Micmac Material Culture from 1600 AD to the Present. Halifax: The Novia Scotia Museum, 1980. Contains description of Micmac dress with mention of beadwork. Acknowledgements: Bruce Bourgue, Chief Archeologist and Curator of Ethnology, Maine State Museum • Theresa Hoffman, Executive Director, Miane Indian Basketmakers Alliance • Jennifer Sapiel Neptune, exhibit consultant • Maureen E. Smith, Director Native American Studies Program, University of Maine • Gail Sockabasin, Associate Director, Wabanaki Center, University of Maine • Karen Wihbey, volunteer • Ruth Whitehead, Assistant Curator of Ethnology, Nova Scotia Museum Lenders to the exhibit: Abbe Musuem, Bar Harbor, Maine; Kim Cartwright; Maine Historical Society, Portland, Maine; Maine State Museum, Augusta, Maine; Jennifer Sapiel Neptune; New York State Historical Association, Fenimore House Museum, Thaw Collection, Cooperstown, New York; Peabody Essex Museum, Salem, Massachusetts; and Nancy and Roger Prince Exhibit Curators: Gretchen Faulkner and Nancy
Prince Virtual Exhibit Credits: Photographs by Stephen Bicknell, Research Assistant, Department of Anthropology, University of Maine
Online Exhibit "Brilliantly Beaded" was created by Matthew Flagg
Funding for “Brilliantly Beaded” was provided by a major grant from the Maine Humanities Council and the Cultural Affairs Committee, University of Maine, which administers the Arthur R. Lord Fund and the Class of 1934 Fund. Educational programming offered in conjunction with the exhibit was funded by the Expansion Arts Fund of the Maine Community Foundation.
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Copyright © 2003 Hudson Museum, The University of Maine, A Member of the University of Maine System, All Rights Reserved
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