Aaron Glass
Aaron Glass is associate professor at Bard Graduate Center.
Glass, Aaron
Glass, Aaron
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Description: Objects of Exchange: Social and Material Transformation on the Late...
In developing Objects of Exchange, as Aaron Glass selected objects from the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) and planned his course syllabus at the Bard Graduate Center (BGC), a number of challenges quickly became apparent to the exhibit team. While organizing the list of loan requests, a significant overlap in themes and selection criteria across specific objects emerged. We asked...
PublisherBard Graduate Center
Related print edition pages: pp.227-235
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00276.010
Aaron Glass (Editor) and Eugenia Kisin (Contributor)
Description: Objects of Exchange: Social and Material Transformation on the Late...
Editor’s note: Unless otherwise stated, attributions and identifications come from American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) collection records. Makers’ tribal affiliations are typically suggested by the site of collection, although we discuss instances where these may diverge. Clear dates of manufacture are highly rare for ethnographic collections of this vintage; here we generally...
Author
Aaron Glass (Editor) and Eugenia Kisin (Contributor)
PublisherBard Graduate Center
Related print edition pages: pp.91-210
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00276.008
Description: Objects of Exchange: Social and Material Transformation on the Late...
In 1866 John Keast Lord, a member of the British North American Boundary Commission, published a two-volume account of his travels through the recently established Crown Colony of British Columbia, in which he mapped the territory for prospective settlement while...
PublisherBard Graduate Center
Related print edition pages: pp.3-35
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00276.002
Description: Objects of Exchange: Social and Material Transformation on the Late...
Until recently the material heritage of Native North Americans was not a primary feature of the curriculum or exhibition program at the Bard Graduate Center (BGC). Although certain topics or objects may have appeared in courses and exhibits, they were not an integrated component. This is beginning to change, however, as the BGC expands its global purview and builds innovative institutional...
PublisherBard Graduate Center
Related print edition pages: pp.xi-xxi
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00276.001
Description: Objects of Exchange: Social and Material Transformation on the Late...
Aaron Glass (Editor)
https://doi.org/10.37862/aaeportal.00276
The late nineteenth century was a period of rapid colonization and dramatic change for the indigenous peoples of the Northwest Coast of America. Objects of Exchange approaches the material culture of the period as visual evidence of shifting intercultural relations. Drawing on the collection of the American Museum of Natural History—from decorated clothing to containers, ceremonial regalia to trade goods—this book reveals the artistic traces of dynamic indigenous activity whereby objects were altered, repurposed, and adapted to meet the challenges of the time. Rather than treating the period as a climax of “traditional” art and culture, the authors suggest that we view its objects as witnesses to the dawn of an indigenous modernity. This remarkable book includes an intimate family portrait of the renowned Haida artist Charles Edenshaw; a discussion of the use of silver in economic and ceremonial contexts; and an exploration of the ways in which Tlingit women adapted beadwork to crest display as well as the tourist trade.

*This eBook is available exclusively on the A&AePortal.*
Author
Aaron Glass (Editor)
Print publication date February 2011 (out of print)
Print ISBN 9780300174427
EISBN 9780300265989
Illustrations 152
Print Status out of print