Edward S. Curtis
Edward Sherriff Curtis (February 19, 1868 – October 19, 1952) was an American photographer and ethnologist whose work primarily focused on the Native Peoples of the western United States and Canada. Sometimes referred to as the "Shadow Catcher", Curtis traveled tens of thousands of miles over more than twenty-five years to document and record their ways of life through photography and extensive anthropological studies.
Born in Wisconsin, Curtis moved with his father to the Puget Sound area of what was then Washington Territory in the fall of 1887. His father died about eight months later, just three days after his mother and siblings joined them. Edward had no more than six years of education, and his only training in photography came from a brief apprenticeship in Minnesota. In 1891, he mortgaged their homestead and bought into a partnership in a Seattle portrait studio. He was just 23 years old when he realized that photography was his life’s calling.
He worked with two different partners for several years, then opened his own studio in 1898. He never looked back.
Curtis took his first photographs of Native People around 1895-1896, not far from the studio he then shared with Thomas Guptill. In these photographs, he was freed from the conventions of his commercial studio portraits, allowing him to show the individuality of his work. He was so pleased with these images that he began traveling around Puget Sound to photograph other Native Peoples.

His images became so popular that in 1906, he was given a rare interview with Wall Street financier J. P. Morgan in New York. Morgan agreed to initially fund Curtis’s project, to be known as The North American Indian (NAI). Unfortunately, Morgan imposed strict conditions on his funding that eventually imposed significant financial and time burdens on Curtis. As a result, Curtis spent the next twenty-four years desperately trying to find enough money to complete his project.
Despite overwhelming odds, Curtis finally completed his project in 1930, though by then he was financially and physically drained. To make matters even worse for Curtis, the 1929 Wall Street crash triggered the Great Depression, and millions of people lost their jobs. Curtis's project and his very expensive books quickly disappeared from the public's eye, as did the continuing plight of Native Peoples trapped on bleak and unforgiving reservation lands.
For more about Edward Curtis, see his Wikipedia page.