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‘Faces drawn in the sand’: a rescue project of Native Peoples’ photographs stored at the Museum of La Plata, Argentina – major project

Dr Irina Podgorny, Museo de La Plata
2008 award – major project
£50,807 for 18 months

This project aims to preserve for future research the photographic collections identified in the previous pilot project. Microfilm and digital copies of the collections stored at Museo de La Plata will be created.

The albums and collections that will be microfilmed are:

Guido Boggiani Album (Gran Chaco)
Pedro Godoy Album (Tierra del Fuego)
Francisco Moreno Album (Museo Antropológico de Buenos Aires,1878-Viaje 1883-1884)
Samuel Boote Album (Tehuelches)
Calchaquí Album (Calchaquí Valleys-NW Argentina)
Christiano Junior Album (Río Negro-Patagonia)
Julio Koslowski Collection (Patagonia)
Carlos Bruch Collection (Yungas, NW Argentina)
Roland Bonaparte Collection (Collection Anthropologique du Prince Roland Bonaparte-Old and New World)
Natalio Bernal Collection (Altiplano-Bolivia)
Fernando Lahille Collection (Tierra del Fuego)
Adolfo Methfessel Collection (NW Argentina)
Omar Gancedo Collection (Paraguay)
«Gaucho» Collection (Buenos Aires)
Hermann ten Kate Collection (Tehuelches)
Benjamin Muñíz Barretto Collection (NW Argentina)
«Vignati » Collection (Patagonia)
Fuegian Collection (Tierra del Fuego)

The collections stored at La Plata Museum provide a picture of pre-industrial societies of a wide area of South America during the late 19th - early 20th centuries. They include photographs on paper, albumens, and glass plate negatives. During the previous pilot project they were relocated to Archivo Histórico (Museo de La Plata) and are currently kept in good climatic conditions. The albums Boggiani, Bonaparte (Old and New World), and the Bolivian Collection represent objects used by ethnologists as visual data of distant “Indian” tribes. The Moreno Album contains images of F. P. Moreno's Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, established in 1878. This album along with “Calchaquí” Album were presented at the Paris World Exhibition of 1878 and both contain very rare images.

The materials which have been affected by fungi and improperly stored have been physically stabilised and can be microfilmed. There are no back-ups of the glass plate negatives; their destruction would mean the definitive loss of the collections. Although the collections have been relocated, these unique collections have been damaged by years of bad conditions of storage that cannot be repaired. Thus microfilming is the proper way to ensure the survival of the material. Moreover, access to these materials being requested by different communities and researchers cannot be granted in their present state as there would be a great risk to the integrity of the collections and the total loss of legibility. Microfilming would allow open access to data for a history that is still waiting to be written.

La Plata Museum, Argentina , was established in 1884, dedicated to the study of "American Man". It was the first institution of this kind in South America, resulting from the donation of several anthropological and archaeological collections gathered in the Argentinean interior during the 1870s. This Museum envisioned a continental scope: to achieve its goals it organised different strategies to collect objects that encompassed societies that, by those years, were perceived to be in the process of "extinction". In the late 1870s and 1880s several campaigns against Native peoples from Patagonia and Chaco were carried out as governmental or private initiatives in order to erase "savagery" from the lands to be included into the market economy. Besides, indigenous peoples from Northwestern Argentina were incorporated as labour force into the new industries established in that region, such as the "Ingenios" (sugar refineries) from Tucumán, Salta y Jujuy. Either to record "vanishing races" or as testimony to the changes experienced by Native peoples in the process of becoming "civilized", photographic expeditions were dispatched to the localities and scenes where the process was taking place. As a result, La Plata Museum became one of the repositories of the visual documents of a history that was not deeply analysed.

This proposal aims to:
a) List the materials, providing the cultural, social and political background in which the photographs were created;
b) Continue the training of local staff in the Image Permanence Institute of Rochester;
c) Microfilm all the photographic collections described in the pilot project. 35 mm microfilming will be used as the archival medium in combination with digital imaging. The process will be done in cooperation with CEHIPE photographers;
d) To create an online catalogue of the collection, with access from La Plata Museum web page;
e) To consolidate a Southern Cone local centre for the preservation of endangered archives with special focus on photography and glass plate negatives.

 

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