Wána mítaat

dc.contributor.authorTruman Lowe (b. 1944)
dc.contributor.authorLowe, Truman (b. 1944)
dc.date.accessioned2022-07-16T16:05:44Z
dc.date.available2022-07-16T16:05:44Z
dc.descriptionEdition 12 Title for this print translates in the Umatilla language for "river three" " The language of moving waters, of rivers and streams, inspired the prints 'Wana'. The work is a layering of the same image printed on three different Japanese papers. These layers suggest the physical and symbolic depths of the river and the currents of salmon that swim upriver. Wanting to honor the Native peoples of the region, I chose the Umatilla word for river, Wana, as the title of the prints. The river gives life." Truman Lowe.
dc.description.sponsorshipCrow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts Archive, Collaborating printer: Frank Janzen, TMP, Crow’s Shadow Press
dc.formatImage
dc.format.extent13.5"x 12"; Paper Size: 30"x22.5"
dc.format.mediumPrint
dc.format.mediumTwo-color lithograph
dc.identifier.otherCSP 02-106(c)
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10177/20153
dc.relation.ispartofCrow's Shadow Institute of the Arts
dc.rightsFor use information see: http://www.willamette.edu/arts/hfma/collections/copyright.html
dc.titleWána mítaat
dspace.iiif.enabledTRUE
iiif.canvas.namingImage
local.cultureNorth American / United States / Wisconsin / Ho-Chunk / Winnebago
local.mastercopyHfmoaVolume39/10.jpg

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