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In Search of the Modern Type: Angel de Cora’s Indigenous Book Illustration and the Work of Abstraction
October 12, 2023 @ 4:00 pm – 5:00 pm EDT
The Eleventh Annual J. R. de J. Jackson Lecture
Presented by the Book History & Print Culture Collaborative Specialization
in association with the Book & Media Studies Program (St. Michael’s College)
In Search of the Modern Type: Angel de Cora’s Indigenous Book Illustration and the Work of Abstraction
Presented by Caroline Wigginton, University of Mississippi
Thursday, October 12, 4:00 pm
Charbonnel Lounge, St. Michael’s College
81 St. Mary St., Toronto
Reception to follow
Around 1900, Ho-Chunk artist and book illustrator Angel de Cora created a portrait for Mary Catherine Judd’s collection Wigwam Stories. That portrait, “The Indian of To-Day,” serves as the frontispiece for the book’s final section, which is about what was then contemporary Indigenous American life in the US. The image depicts a Native adult, wearing a bandanna, pants, shirt, and moccasins. Their hair is in two plaits, and they are leaning into a log cabin doorway. It is a portrait that is both unremarkable in its suggestion of an informal, every-day existence, and unlike other common images of ca. 1900 Indigenous persons. By tracing the circulation of turn-of-the-century Indigenous portraits alongside Angel de Cora’s journeys as an artist, this talk establishes a thick textual context for this picture. What can this unremarkable yet unusual image tell us about Native book illustration and the formation of new ideas of Indigenous modernity, labor, and gender identity? How are Indigenous artisans, pressmen, and other laborers involved in bookproduction using their roles to negotiate and shape responses to settler colonialism? In short, who was the “Indian of To-Day”?
Master Class
Caroline Wigginton, University of Mississippi
Friday, October 13, 10:00 am
Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library
120 St. George St., Toronto
Prof. Wigginton will lead a seminar the day after the lecture, drawing on
materials from the Fisher collection and developing themes from her talk.
The seminar is open to graduate students in BHPC’s participating units,
including those not enrolled in BHPC, and to upper-year undergraduates
in the BMS program. Registration is required as space is limited. To
register, email bookhistory@masseycollege.ca by Friday, October 6.