On display at the Holland Museum from February 4 – June 20, 2022
Contemporary Portraits of Native Americans by James Cook will share a glimpse into the faces of native people from across the United States. This collection of 25 color photographs will explore the varied lives of Native Americans in the modern-day through the lens of photographer James Cook. Stories of family, tradition, and resilience will resonate with visitors as they view photographs as vibrant as the people portrayed.
James Cook is a lifelong photographer who worked for years as a freelance photojournalist, with works in publications such as Time, Newsweek, and Forbes. He has spent decades building relationships with Native American communities across the country, documenting dancers, artists, elders, and other keepers of tradition.
Related Programming
Dancing for Our Tribe: Potawatomi Tradition in the New Millennium
This program was live on June 10, 2022. Click here for more information about the program.
Artist’s Talk: Contemporary Portraits of Native Americans
by James Cook – Part 1 of 2
This program was virtual on February 10, 2022. Click here for more information about the program.
Artist’s Talk: Contemporary Portraits of Native Americans
by James Cook – Part 2 of 2
This program was virtual on February 24, 2022. Click here for more information about the program.
About James Cook, Photojournalist
Following graduation from Southern Illinois University with degrees in both photography and journalism, James Cook started his career as a freelance photojournalist in Denver, Colorado. His first client was the Associated Press, where he learned to work under very short deadlines and to recognize what was of national versus local interest. For the next few decades, Jim covered the Rocky Mountain region, writing and shooting for Time, Newsweek, Business Week, Forbes, The Washington Post, The LA Times, and many others. Corporations often hired him to bring his editorial style to their marketing and annual reports.
During those years Jim served as a board member and a national officer of the American Society of Media Photographers. In that role, he worked to influence business standards for professional photographers and copyright legislation, including testifying before the U.S. Senate.
In 1984 Jim began his photo documentation of contemporary Native American life, which continues today. His portraits of the people of Wounded Knee, South Dakota gained national attention when PBS sent a crew to film him at work. Photographic film was still the rule and Kodak used PBS footage in seminars around the country as an endorsement of their products. The Smithsonian Institute purchased prints for their permanent collection in the National Museum of the American Indian and for the traveling exhibit “Song for the Horse Nation.”
The advent of digital photography virtually eliminated the need to hire professional photojournalists to cover events as everyone became equipped with a camera ready to transmit photos instantly. In 2005, Jim and his wife, Kat, chose to move to Saugatuck, where he is busy photographing Michigan and lakeshore landscapes. His documentation of Native Americans continues here, resulting in several of the images in this exhibit.
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