Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) S.A. Stolte
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Edgewood College
ANO 2019
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO American Indian Culture and Research Journal
ISSN 0161-6463
E-ISSN 0161-6463
EDITORA UCLA American Indian Studies Center
DOI 10.17953/AICRJ.43.4.STOLTE
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14

Resumo

This article considers the artistic career of self-identified Osage painter Yeffe Kimball (1906–1978). Following the stylistic trends of modern American Indian painting as largely defined by non-Native critics and a male-dominated art world, Kimball's works were accepted into major exhibits. How Kimball was able to 'pass' as an American Indian artist is the core of a larger narrative—one that demonstrates and provokes critique of how her fraud took advantage of, but also contributed to strengthening, an exclusionary, devaluative settler-colonial dynamic of expropriation that continues into the present. This article critiques the manner in which museums and art schools defined societal values of 'Indianness' that marginalized Native artists. Examining Yeffe Kimball's successful ethnic fraud affirms a patriarchal, assimilationist narrative and the extent to which European-American identities, institutions, and art practices control American Indian imagery.

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