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Chi-Weé and Loki of the desert
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Pool in the Desert
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Woman kneeling at pool of water, with large pottery vessel.
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Edge of the Desert. Hopi Land
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This collection of photographs documents Native Americans living in Arizona, New Mexico and Oklahoma between 1904 and 1917. The primary tribes represented are Hopi, Navajo and Taos Pueblo Indians, but there are also Osage, Apache and several other Southwestern tribes. There are many portraits, as well as posed, romantic scenes depicting storytelling, hunting, weaving, or playing instruments. Additional candid views show people in their daily activities, pueblos, and dance ceremonies. In a letter to Henry Huntington, Feb. 12, 1923, Moon describes these photographs as "a complete collection of my Indian pictures made from the beginning of my work in 1904 to 1917. It includes ... the pick of the Fred Harvey collection that I made for them during the period of my contract with them, 1907 to 1914, and my own collection made since the latter date." Besides the portraits, there are scenes of Indians in their daily activities, including baking bread in outdoor ovens, gathering water in pots, riding horses and tending livestock. There are also views of the Hopi Snake Dance, and the Corn Dance at Santo Domingo.
photCL 313

Children of the Desert. Near Oraibi. Hopi
Visual Materials
A Hopi woman holding a baby and seated at the edge of a mesa with another child.
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Edge of the Mesa. Painted Desert at left. Hopi
Visual Materials
View of pueblo building on the edge of the mesa.
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Evening. Navajo Land. At the edge of the Painted Desert
Visual Materials
A Navajo man on horseback.
photCL 313