Amazon.com: A Land So Remote : Wooden Artifacts of Frontier New Mexico, 1700S-1900s (9781878610751): Larry Frank, Skip Keith Miller, Charles Bennett, David Skolkin, Michael O'Shaughnessy: Books

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A Land So Remote : Wooden Artifacts of Frontier New Mexico, 1700S-1900s [Hardcover]

Larry Frank (Photographer), Skip Keith Miller (Author), Charles Bennett (Author), David Skolkin (Author), Michael O'Shaughnessy (Author)


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Book Description

November 1, 2001 Red Crane Art Series (Book 3)

Dedicated to the many people of New Mexico who created a rich and fascinating culture in a harsh land, A Land So Remote - Wooden Artifacts of Frontier New Mexico, salutes the importance of these vital and pragmatic wooden objects. That the people who made them survived and thrived, is a testament to their constancy and success.

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For over twelve thousand years, the indigenous people of the Southwest have fashioned tools, weapons, religious artifacts, furniture, toys, architectural details and domestic utensils from wood. With the coming of the Spanish, new tools, technologies, and materials forever altered the indigenous inhabitants' traditional way of life. New Mexican wooden artifacts beautifully express the ingenuity and adaptability of this regional mestizo society. Illustrated with hundreds of color photographs of works from eight museums and nine private collections.


Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

During the 19th century, the fervent gratitude New Mexicans felt for their deliverance from the difficulties of frontier life gave birth to a marvelous and exciting period of religious art, explored in the first two volumes of this three-volume set on frontier New Mexico. These two volumes (Religious Art of New Mexico, 1780-1907) cover the art of santos, retablos, and bultos, personal objects of worship drawn from medieval traditions that were more accessible than the official saints. In the home, they became like beloved members of the family, and they served an important social function as well. As Frank notes, "Rightly understood, santos are a kind of 'liberation theology' written in the language of wood, plaster, and paint, an understanding of Christianity that empowers the poor to free themselves from unjust socioeconomic and cultural structures in the larger world and within themselves." The third volume (Wooden Artifacts of Frontier New Mexico) covers wooden objects e.g., agricultural tools, tanning tools, furniture, toys, and games created in reaction to frontier needs and the lack of metal. These objects are often prime examples of cultural transference between Native Americans and Hispanics. Many of the images show rare works, not previously photographed, from nine museums and numerous private collections. With their extensive essays and careful selection of beautifully reproduced images, Frank (The New Kingdom of the Saints) and Miller (curator and director, Taos Historic Museums) make a major contribution to the field. Available as individual volumes and in a collectors' limited-edition boxed set, this is recommended for special and academic collections in art history, history of the Southwest, and Hispanic culture. Sylvia Andrews, Indiana State Lib., Indianapolis
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

A land so Remote will undoubtedly become a masterpiece of art history...have a tremendous impact on readers and scholars. -- ABQ Arts, February 2002

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Red Crane Books (November 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1878610759
  • ISBN-13: 978-1878610751
  • Product Dimensions: 11.3 x 9.4 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 3.6 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,180,822 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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