Lower Ahtna Woman (Framed Prints)
Lower Ahtna Woman
A high-quality fine art giclee print on archival quality paper made from a high-resolution digital image of the original artwork, available in three sizes - A4, A3 and A2.
Black FSC®-certified wood frames, complete with high quality glass windows, ready to be hung on the customer’s wall.
Original digital image of artwork – 6.49mb, 5666 x 7990 pixels, 300dpi, 24 bit depth.
Original graphite pencil drawing created on Daler Rowney Fine Grain paper, 200gsm, size A3 (42cm x 29.7cm). Time taken: Circa 30-40 hours (March 2020)
Source Material: Unconfirmed but believed to be an original photograph by Edward S. Curtis, c. 1902.
(The original artwork is not for sale.)
Lower Ahtna Woman
A high-quality fine art giclee print on archival quality paper made from a high-resolution digital image of the original artwork, available in three sizes - A4, A3 and A2.
Black FSC®-certified wood frames, complete with high quality glass windows, ready to be hung on the customer’s wall.
Original digital image of artwork – 6.49mb, 5666 x 7990 pixels, 300dpi, 24 bit depth.
Original graphite pencil drawing created on Daler Rowney Fine Grain paper, 200gsm, size A3 (42cm x 29.7cm). Time taken: Circa 30-40 hours (March 2020)
Source Material: Unconfirmed but believed to be an original photograph by Edward S. Curtis, c. 1902.
(The original artwork is not for sale.)
Lower Ahtna Woman
A high-quality fine art giclee print on archival quality paper made from a high-resolution digital image of the original artwork, available in three sizes - A4, A3 and A2.
Black FSC®-certified wood frames, complete with high quality glass windows, ready to be hung on the customer’s wall.
Original digital image of artwork – 6.49mb, 5666 x 7990 pixels, 300dpi, 24 bit depth.
Original graphite pencil drawing created on Daler Rowney Fine Grain paper, 200gsm, size A3 (42cm x 29.7cm). Time taken: Circa 30-40 hours (March 2020)
Source Material: Unconfirmed but believed to be an original photograph by Edward S. Curtis, c. 1902.
(The original artwork is not for sale.)
The Ahtna (also Ahtena, Atna, Ahtna-kohtaene, or Copper River) are an Alaska Native Athabaskan people of the Athabaskan-speaking ethnolinguistic group. The people's homeland called Atna Nenn', is located in the Copper River area of southern Alaska, and the name Ahtna derives from the local name for the Copper River. The total population of Ahtna is estimated at around 1,427. Their neighbors are other Na-Dené-speaking and Yupik peoples: Dena'ina (west), Koyukon (a little part of northwest), Lower Tanana (north), Tanacross (north), Upper Tanana (northeast), Southern Tutchone (southeast, in Canada), Tlingit (southeast), Eyak (south), and Chugach Sugpiaq (south).
There are four main dialect divisions and eight historic regional bands (tribal unions): To take advantage of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act (ANCSA) of 1971, the Ahtna formed Ahtna, Incorporated. The organization is a for-profit entity that oversees the land obtained under ANCSA (The Native Village of Chitina (Tsedi Ná) is organized by the Chitina Native Corporation). 714,240 acres were allocated, consisting of eight villages:
Retrieved from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ahtna&oldid=1206678091
Official website (http://www.ahtnaheritagefoundation.com)