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In 1983 the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Arizona opened a continuous exhibit featuring images of Southwest Native Americans, with their voices, thoughts, music, and cultural art. The award winning audio-visual exhibit was compiled into a book published in 1986 with the photographs of Stephen Trimble and Harvey Lloyd; accompanied again with the quotes of the Southwest Native Americans that had went with the exhibit.

Cover, Our Voices, Our Land; Feast Day, San Juan Pueblo, New Mexico (1986 Stephen Trimble) published by Northland Press

Our Voices, Our Land is a visually and emotionally stunning compilation of American photography. The purpose of the exhibit was to document and delve into the cultures of the peoples of the Southwest without interceding white American cultural values into the piece.

Monument Valley, Arizona (1986 Harvey Lloyd, Aerial)

In this aspect both the exhibit and its accompanying book are a success. Both Trimble and Lloyd capture the land, its people, and their culture in their natural beauty without bias, exaltation, or recrimination; a style which is a running theme in their other works.

Saguaro Cactus, Arizona (1986 Harvey Lloyd)

The landscape photography is shot in all its majesty and simplicity; from faraway shots of lonely and imposing mountains to light waves of sand, dry cracked earth, and flowering cacti. The book begins with place. Where do these cultures and people come from? What is the setting for their tale? This really pushes the reader into the mind of the people who live there. The use of triptych for the panoramic shots adds a graphic quality to the layout of the book.

Pueblo Man and Child, New Mexico (1986 Harvey Lloyd)

The section on sustenance affords the viewer/anthropologist a midway point, or rather a connection between the land and its inhabitants. Vibrant photographs of plants, vegetables, corn, and the land with the words of Native Peoples highlight the importance and respect they have for the land.

Moonrise, Casa Grande Ruins National Monument, Arizona (1986 Stephen Trimble)

Family, Community, and Celebrations, the following sections, are the most telling photographs from a cultural aspect; fabulous portraits of people in everyday activity, rituals, and celebrations, from the past and present, in color and black and white. The color photographs make the people come to life, while the duotone images highlight the activities that the subjects are doing, where color would detract from the action.

Deer Dance, San Juan Pueblo, New Mexico (1986 Stephen Trimble)

The final sections, Artists and Continuity, are both a testament to the history of the Southwest Peoples, in that, through their arts, they continue their traditions and hold to their customs. In these set of photographs one experiences not only the pride of these people, but also their turmoil and struggle to live in two worlds today; their struggle of thinking in two worlds. Trimble captures this brilliantly in his image of the Santa Fe Railroad during dusk. The Railroad symbolizes not just the movement of ideas and culture, but the middle ground between two separate worlds.

Hopi Potter, Polacca, Arizona (1986 Stephen Trimble)

Our Voices, Our Land is a poignant look into the Southwest Native Americans through their eyes, in their words; through their past, present, and what issues they feel affect their future. The color photography is brilliant in texture, content, and subject. Coupled with the older black and white archival photography, the images lend the viewer a rare glimpse into another world, another way of life. One sympathizes with these American cultures and feels their pride and struggles. Our Voices, Our Land is a wonderful experience.

Santa Fe Railroad, Northern Arizona (1986 Stephen Trimble)

>>Click here to purchase Our Voices, Our Land by Stephen Trimble & Harvey Lloyd...




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Lenaya Martinez

14-02-2008

Hey this is a great website. O and 4got 2 tell u dat da pic of this Deer Dancer that iz 4rm San Juan Iz MY DADDY!!!
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