Woman and Child - Nunivak, Edward Sheriff Curtis

Artwork Overview

Woman and Child - Nunivak, 1972
Portfolio/Series title: Portraits from North American Indian Life
Where object was made: North and Central America
Material/technique: photogravure
Credit line: Source unknown
Accession number: S2007.194
Not on display

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Label texts

Exhibition Label: "Climate Change at the Poles," Jan-2009, Kate Meyer, Jennifer Talbott, and Angela Watts Bird skins were a particularly resourceful material used by the Inuit for the construction of clothing. The eider duck has very thick feathers covering its warm down that enable it to dive in the icy waters. The Inuit often used these duck skins to make clothing and blankets which were much warmer than seal skin and could be used when caribou or other thick furs were not available. Both sides of this blanket are made from eider duck skins that have had the contour feathers plucked out, leaving only the thick, soft down underneath. The front of the blanket is made from the skins of male ducks and uses the natural color patterns of the birds’ feathers to create the scalloped stripes in the center and the green, black, and white decorative border.