Tlingit Clan Hat late 1800's N California Coast, Cantor Arts Center, Palo Alto, California USA
Native California Basketry, Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University.MP4
a sampling of lost art video by Jack D. Deal
The Zoopraxiscope at the Cantor Arts Center (Stanford)
Palo Alto, CA
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Stanford, Cal., USA, Cantor Arts Museum at Stanford University,
Stanford, Cal., USA, Cantor Arts Museum at Stanford University,
Stanford's Cantor Arts Center digitizes collection for online database
Stanford's Cantor Arts Center has completed a 6-year project to make its collection accessible online. Students, faculty, scholars and the general public can now visit the museum's website ( type in a title, artist, theme or other search criteria, and see high-quality digital images of the majority of the 45,000-plus objects in the collection.
Tourist original footage - Palo Alto Museum of American Heritage asmr?
Here is my new tea:
Here are the art books:
Here are my art prints:
The watercolor I use:
My Etsy shop:
My facebook:
My Pinterest:
My Instagram:
Stanford University: Stanford Family @Cantor Art Center
Leland Stanford Jr. is the namesake of Stanford University, adjacent to Palo Alto, California. Although the university is generally referred to as Stanford University or Stanford, its official name is still Leland Stanford Junior University, as seen on the university seal.
He was the only child of Governor Leland Stanford of California and his wife Jane Stanford née Lathrop.
Leland caught typhoid two months before his 16th birthday, while on a Grand Tour of Europe with his parents. He originally fell ill in Athens. His parents rushed him to Italy for medical treatment, first to Naples, then to Rome, and eventually to Florence, where he died after weeks of alternately improving and worsening.
Leland Stanford Sr. told his wife that the children of California shall be our children. To honor their son upon returning to the United States, the Stanfords devoted their fortune to a memorial in his name, Leland Stanford Junior University. The university opened its doors in 1891.
Leland Stanford Jr. is interred beside his parents at the Stanford family mausoleum on the Stanford campus. After the death of his father on June 21, 1893, his mother guided the development of the university until her death on February 28, 1905.
Migrating to California from New York at the time of the Gold Rush, Amasa Leland Stanford (March 9, 1824 – June 21, 1893) became a successful merchant and wholesaler, and continued to build his business empire. He spent one two-year term as Governor of California after his election in 1861, and later eight years as a senator from the state. As president of Southern Pacific Railroad and, beginning in 1861, Central Pacific, he had tremendous power in the region and a lasting impact on California. He is widely considered a robber baron.
Olga Show Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University California
Auguste Rodin France, 1840-1917 galleries.
Oral Traditions
This video, adapted from material provided by the ECHO partners, features Cecilia Kunz, a Native elder from the Tlingit people of Southeast Alaska, who describes how stories are passed on among her people. Although the Tlingit language is now written, and virtually all Tlingits are literate, they continue to pass on their stories orally. Cecilia Kunz illuminates how dance, clothing, traditional objects like totem poles, and events like potlatches all become means of transmitting and preserving stories.
A Visit To The Stanford Museum
My dad, his two sisters and I visited the Stanford museum. Here's the record of that short trip.
Nambe Reservation 1: tour of the reservation in New Mexico
Nambe Reservation 1: tour of the reservation in New Mexico
Stanford museum
lookin at awesome sculptures in Stanford museum
Auguste Rodin's ''Flying Figure'', Cantor Arts Center, Stanford University.MP4
another one from the master himself video by Jack D. Deal
The Hide of My Tongue
The Hide of My Tongue, poetry by Vivian Faith Prescott
Someone You Should Know, Stanford Hospital
Peggy Smedley chats with Bert Hurlbut, vice president of new hospital construction at Stanford Health Care, about the New Stanford Hospital, discussing seismic isolators and the latest innovation going into the project.
Ben Paul TEEHITON RAVEN HAT
Life with Zia part 1
Zia's medical appointments
San Francisco - Golden Gate Park e Exploratorium
Passeio por alguns dos principais pontos turísticos de San Francisco
Native American Pottery Collection Returns To Silver City
(SILVER CITY) -- Thirty years ago, Dr. Cynthia Bettison was a graduate student sifting through the dirt on a ranch outside silver city. Studying archaeology, she was looking for what was left of the Mimbres Native American people.
Today, she is the curator of the museum at Western New Mexico University. She says, even then, she knew she'd be back.
I said to my cohort...I'm gonna come back and fix this place...9 years later, the position opened up and everybody that heard me say that gave me the advertisement. I'd already applied, of course.
The Mimbres were a curious people. They lived from about A.D. 200 until the 1100's. Before they left, they swept the floors clean.
There was still plenty of evidence to be found, though. Mimbres families buried their ancestors close by...with a well-worn bowl placed on the head of the body.
Someone would pass away...and a portion of the floor would be dug up...they would be buried underneath the floor.
The bowls were painted, some in two or three different colors. Dr. Bettison says they're called a polychrome -- she chose one with a rattlesnake neck and head and the body of a turkey for the symbol of the museum. She says the two animals probably represent the intermarriage of clans.
Academic researchers brought back all the material...a lot of material.
The tools and pottery of the collection are so vast that it takes several rooms to store it all. Not all of it is open to the public, so the museum has dedicated a couple of rooms to just store racks and racks of the pottery.
Really what it did, it transformed our little museum that was known for...looted...Mimbres pottery into this incredible academic research museum...there will never be another collection like the NAN Ranch Collection.
That's because the excavation was performed on private property and before New Mexico law prevented moving any Native American remains, even for research.
Bettison says it could take decades to sort through everything here. For now, the material is waiting for a new generation of archaeologists to tell its story.
Sloan Patton reported.
Palm Dr., Entrance to Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA