“THREE
CHIEFS 1900
“ The
Three Chiefs” is, historically, arguably the single most important
of Curtis’ 50,000 photographic images. The photograph was
made in the summer of 1900 and is the key image from that critical,
watershed experience in Curtis’ life. It was during this short
field trip to Montana with noted ethnographer George Bird Grinnell
that Curtis first encountered Native Americans whose culture was
still largely intact and who were also willing to share their religion,
mythology, and personal lives with him. This brief experience ignited
Cutis’ passion to preserve a comprehensive record of Native
American life. This two-week experience inalterably changed Curtis
and his life was never the same again. It is said that in making
this image of three tribal leaders in their traditional garb on
a typical upland prairie that Curtis spent three days looking for
the perfect combination of riders, sky, and prairie.
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