AZ -- Phoenix -- Heard Museum:
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- Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
- HM_170714_001.JPG: Home
Native People in the Southwest
- HM_170714_009.JPG: Roxanne Swentzell
"Tse-ping," 1991
- HM_170714_013.JPG: Home
Native People in the Southwest
- HM_170714_033.JPG: Southern Pueblo Pottery and the Railroad
- HM_170714_045.JPG: The Goldwater Collection and the Evolution of Carving
- HM_170714_062.JPG: Colorado River Land
- HM_170714_072.JPG: Allan Houser
Spirit of the Wind, 1992
- HM_170714_075.JPG: Bob Haozous
White Stele, 1975
- HM_170714_079.JPG: Bob Haozous
The Vanishing Buffalo Herd, 1993
- HM_170714_083.JPG: Bob Haozous
White Dress, 1973
- HM_170714_087.JPG: Allan Houser
War Pony, 1978
- HM_170714_092.JPG: Allan Houser
Gift of the Earth, 1991
- HM_170714_099.JPG: Allan Houser
Apache Cradleboard, 1994
- HM_170714_103.JPG: Allan Houser
Heading Home, 1979
- HM_170714_106.JPG: Doug Hyde
The Vigil -- Mountains, Valleys, Mesas, 1998
- HM_170714_117.JPG: Bob Haozous
Woman in Love, 1983
- HM_170714_124.JPG: Allan Houser
Wind on the Mesa, 1991
- HM_170714_129.JPG: John Hoover
Aleut Dance Staff, 1991
- HM_170714_134.JPG: Allan Houser
Gift of the Earth, 1991
- HM_170714_138.JPG: Pablita Velarde's Studio
- HM_170714_147.JPG: Bob Haozous
4 Buffalo Standing Sideways, 1981
- HM_170714_151.JPG: Sadie Curtis, Navajo.
American flag textile, 1976
- HM_170714_154.JPG: Lorenzo Reed, Navajo
Carving, 2002
- HM_170714_167.JPG: Peter Lind
Hat, 2002
- HM_170714_172.JPG: Tammy Garcia
Hunter's Bounty, 2010
- HM_170714_179.JPG: Tammy Garcia
Lunker, 2010
- HM_170714_190.JPG: Allan Houser
We Will Soon Be Home, 1983
- HM_170714_196.JPG: Allan Houser
Ancient Chant, 1994
- HM_170714_204.JPG: Tony Abeyta
Grand Canyon, 2016
- HM_170714_220.JPG: The Founders
- HM_170714_226.JPG: Casa Blanca: The Heard's Home
- HM_170714_232.JPG: Early Collecting
- HM_170714_235.JPG: Creating the Museum
- HM_170714_238.JPG: Early Years of the Museum
- HM_170714_241.JPG: The Heard Museum Guild
- HM_170714_255.JPG: Petrified Wood
- HM_170714_268.JPG: Diego was my everything; my child, my lover, my universe.
-- Frida Kahlo
- HM_170714_273.JPG: Alan Houser
Earth Song, 1978
- HM_170714_283.JPG: Doug Hyde
Flag Song, 1983
- HM_170714_294.JPG: Mario Martinez
Sonoran Desert: Yaqui Home, 2005
- HM_170714_297.JPG: John Hoover
Sea Weed People, 1994
- HM_170714_300.JPG: Roxanne Swentzell
Window to the Past, 1999
- HM_170714_315.JPG: Doug Hyde
The Dollmaker, 1985
- HM_170714_321.JPG: Nora Naranjo-Morse
Khwee-seng (Woman-man), c 1994
- HM_170714_332.JPG: Doug Hyde
Intertribal Greeting, 2003
- HM_170714_336.JPG: Michael Kabotie
"Awatovi Visual Prayers", 2006
- HM_170714_349.JPG: Bob Haozous
Zen Bear, 1985
- HM_170714_354.JPG: Michael Naranjo
He Howls Like A Wolf, 1986
- HM_170714_362.JPG: Doug Hyde
Navajo Water Girl, 1999
- AAA "Gem": AAA considers this location to be a "must see" point of interest. To see pictures of other areas that AAA considers to be Gems, click here.
- Wikipedia Description: Heard Museum
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Heard Museum is a private, not for profit museum located in Phoenix, Arizona, United States, dedicated to the advancement of American Indian art. The museum presents the stories of American Indian people from a first-person perspective, as well as exhibitions of traditional and contemporary art by American Indian artists and artists influenced by American Indian art. The Heard Museum collaborates with American Indian artists and tribal communities on providing visitors with a distinctive perspective about the art of Native people, especially those from the Southwest.
The mission of the Heard Museum is to be "the world's preeminent museum for the presentation, interpretation and advancement of American Indian art, emphasizing its intersection with broader artistic and cultural themes." The main Phoenix location of the Heard Museum has been designated as a Phoenix Point of Pride.
The museum formerly operated the Heard Museum West branch in Surprise which was closed in 2009. The museum also formerly operated the "Heard Museum North Scottsdale" branch in Scottsdale, Arizona, which was closed in May 2014.
History
The Heard Museum was founded in 1929 by Dwight B. and Maie Bartlett Heard to house their personal collection of art. Much of the archaeological material in the Heards' collection came from La Ciudad Indian ruin, which the Heards purchased in 1926 at 19th and Polk streets in Phoenix.
Portions of the museum were designed by architect, Bennie Gonzales, who also designed Scottsdale City Hall.
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I still have them though. If you want me to email them to you, please send an email to guthrie.bruce@gmail.com
and I can email them to you, or, depending on the number of images, just repost the page again will the full-sized images.
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