Close
Digital Collections
Statement on Potentially Offensive Materials
Help
Rights and Reproductions
Log In / Sign Up
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Overview
Loading details...
You do not have the permission to view Original image
Add to collection
Download
Share PDF
Get link
Title
E.A. Burbank Papers [box 02], 1897-1949
Creator
Burbank, E. A. (Elbridge Ayer), 1858-1949
Date
1897-1949
Place
Arizona--Ganado
,
New Southwest
,
Southwest, New
,
United States
,
West (U.S.)
Language
English
Subjects
Indian reservations
,
Indians of North America
,
Portrait painting
,
Trading posts
Description
Most of the letters are written on either inexpensive notebook paper or on the stationary of some Indigenous trading posts.
The Edward E. Ayer Collection also contains 1,242 drawings and 25 oil paintings executed by E.A. Burbank.
Summary
About 350 letters (1897-1914) written by Burbank from various Indigenous villages, trading posts, and towns to his uncle Edward E. Ayer and two scrapbooks (1945-1949) of incoming correspondence. The outgoing correspondence includes Burbank's reports on his painting progress, his travels and experiences in the West, his acquisition of Indigenous crafts such as rugs and pottery, and mention of his painting exhibitions. The letters were written predominately from Oklahoma Territory, the Southwest, and the Dakotas. In his first letters, dated March 1897, Burbank relates his experience painting the Apache chief Geronimo at Fort Sill, OK. In later letters he describes painting other famous chiefs including Red Cloud and Joseph. Many letters were written from John Lorenzo Hubbell's trading post in Ganado, Ariz. where Burbank established a temporary studio. The scrapbooks include incoming correspondence to Burbank at the Hotel Manx in San Francisco. They also contain miscellaneous clippings including reviews of his newly-published reminiscences and a few reproductions of his later sketches. The two scrapbooks, kept in rough chronology, 1945-1949, contain incoming correspondence to Burbank at the Manx Hotel in San Francisco, as well as miscellaneous material. Correspondence consists primarily of fan letters, postcards, thank you notes and requests for artwork, and miscellany consists of clippings, a few reproductions of Burbank's later pictures and some memorabilia. Also added to the collection are a few items relating to Burbank's death and his friendship with Herbert Hamlin, publisher of the Pony Express Courier in San Mateo, California.
Biographical/Historical Note
American painter and illustrator. Elbridge Ayer Burbank was born in 1858 in Harvard, Illinois. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago and in Germany, where he developed his technique in life drawing and portraiture. At first specializing in portraits of African Americans, in 1897 Burbank was commissioned by his uncle Edward E. Ayer, to do a series of portraits of prominent Indigenous chiefs in Oklahoma, New Mexico and Arizona. Accepting the commission, Burbank began his career as an Indigenous portrait authority. He painted Apache Chief Geronimo five times, the only artist to paint the old warrior from life. This began his most productive and successful period as a painter of Indigenous Americans. By 1902, Burbank was roaming the west and southwest, seeking out Native peoples, painting and drawing. He depicted not only the great chiefs but also ordinary individuals, groups and ceremonies of more and 125 tribes. Burbank made friends wherever he traveled, among them was Juan Lorenzo Hubbell of the famed Hubbell Trading Post, a hub for artists, ethnologists and tourists. There he did red chalk drawings of Navajos and many of the patterns for their rugs. During the Depression, Burbank supported himself by drawing and selling scenes for postcards and greeting cards, pictures of famous Americans, and copies of his Indigenous studies. His reproductions were inexpensive, and were widely distributed and collected. His last years were spent at the Manx Hotel in San Francisco, where he died in 1949, after having been struck by a cable car.
Extent
1.5 linear feet (4 boxes)
Format
Correspondence
,
Manuscripts, American
,
Portraits--Sources
,
Sources
Archival Collection Title
Edward E. Ayer Collection
,
Edward E. Ayer Manuscript Collection
Rights Status
Copyright Not Evaluated
Newberry Open Access Policy
The Newberry makes its collections available for any lawful purpose, commercial or non-commercial, without licensing or permission fees to the library, subject to
these terms and conditions.
Contributing Institution
Newberry Library
Link to Catalog
View record
BibID
991371788805867
Size
1496px × 2330px 10.01 MB
IIIF Resource Type
Canvas
File Created
12/04/2013
Filename
991371788805867_Ayer_MS_120_box_02_fol_059_00001.tif
Unique Identifier
NL12884M
Help
Need help finding, searching, sharing, or downloading? Check out our
help page
!
Linked assets