Nicolas G. Rosenthal is a professor of history at Loyola Marymount University. He is the author of Reimagining Indian Country: Native American Migration and Identity in Twentieth-Century Los Angeles.
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Description
List of Illustrations Introduction: Indigenous Artists in the Twentieth Century 1. Indigenizing the Art World: The First Generation of Modern American Indian Painters 2. Painting Native America at School and in Public: Indigenous Artists, Studio Art Programs, and the New Deal 3. Prying the Art World Open: Indigenous Artists in Postwar America 4. Blowing the Art World Apart: Indigenous Artists, 1960s-1980s 5. Rewriting Narratives: Regional Native Art Scenes Epilogue: Indigenous Artists in the Twenty-First Century Acknowledgments Notes Bibliography Index
"Rethinking Indigenous art as modern art is more than trending; it is a major development in the Indigenous artistic and intellectual community. It's not just that Nicolas Rosenthal spares his readers a lot of theoretical jargon, but more importantly he lets the artists' voices shine through as primary to understanding their times and experiences as Indigenous artists."-David MartInez, author of Life of the Indigenous Mind: Vine Deloria Jr. and the Birth of the Red Power Movement "Nicolas Rosenthal focuses on the artists' lives and personal experiences and how each individual artist used art to assert cultural and visual sovereignty. He highlights the thin line that artists had to walk between making art and making a living, between meeting market and museum expectations and personal expression."-Marinella Lentis, author of Colonized through Art: American Indian Schools and Art Education, 1889-1915

