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Becoming Mary Sully: Toward an American Indian Abstract

Contributor(s): Deloria, Philip J (Author)

ISBN: 9780295745046

Publisher: University of Washington Press

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Pub Date: April 24, 2019

Dewey: 700.92

LCCN: 2018046902

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Illustrated, Index

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.80" H x 8.90" L x 7.40" W ( 2.10 lbs) 336 pages

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

"The moment to savor [Mary Sully]. . . has arrived." -- New York Times

Dakota Sioux artist Mary Sully was the great-granddaughter of respected nineteenth-century portraitist Thomas Sully, who captured the personalities of America's first generation of celebrities (including the figure of Andrew Jackson immortalized on the twenty-dollar bill). Born on the Standing Rock reservation in South Dakota in 1896, she was largely self-taught. Steeped in the visual traditions of beadwork, quilling, and hide painting, she also engaged with the experiments in time, space, symbolism, and representation characteristic of early twentieth-century modernist art. And like her great-grandfather Sully was fascinated by celebrity: over two decades, she produced hundreds of colorful and dynamic abstract triptychs, a series of "personality prints" of American public figures like Amelia Earhart, Babe Ruth, and Gertrude Stein.

Sully's position on the margins of the art world meant that her work was exhibited only a handful of times during her life. In Becoming Mary Sully, Philip J. Deloria reclaims that work from obscurity, exploring her stunning portfolio through the lenses of modernism, industrial design, Dakota women's aesthetics, mental health, ethnography and anthropology, primitivism, and the American Indian politics of the 1930s. Working in a complex territory oscillating between representation, symbolism, and abstraction, Sully evoked multiple and simultaneous perspectives of time and space. With an intimate yet sweeping style, Deloria recovers in Sully's work a move toward an anti-colonial aesthetic that claimed a critical role for Indigenous women in American Indian futures--within and distinct from American modernity and modernism.

Brief description: Philip Deloria is the former Carroll Smith-Rosenberg Collegiate Professor of American Culture and History at the University of Michigan, and, as of January 2018, professor of American studies at Harvard University. He is the author of Indians in Unexpected Places (Kansas, 2004) and Playing Indian (Yale, 1998) and co-editor of The Blackwell Companion to Native American History (Blackwell Publishers, 2002) and C.G. Jung and the Sioux Traditions: Dreams, Visions, Nature, and the Primitive (Spring Journal Press, 2009).

Review Quotes:

"The moment to savor [Mary Sully's] semi-abstract celebrity 'portraits' (Albert Einstein, ZaSu Pitts), which combine a modernist spirit and Native American aesthetics, has arrived."

-- "New York Times"

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