Skip to main content
Artist/Maker
Cara Romero
(Chemehuevi, born 1977)
Date2017
MediumArchival pigment print
DimensionsImage: 46 3/4 × 40 in. (118.7 × 101.6 cm)
Sheet: 50 5/8 × 43 15/16 in. (128.6 × 111.6 cm)
Frame: 51 1/2 × 44 1/2 × 2 3/8 in. (130.8 × 113 × 6 cm)
Credit LinePurchase, William G. Roehrick '34 Art Acquisition and Preservation Fund
Object number2021.7.2
Not on view
DescriptionThis photograph is part of Cara Romero’s ongoing First American Girl series, which depicts named Indigenous women in life-size doll boxes, and is intended to act as a corrective to past misrepresentations of Native women. Romero works collaboratively with each sitter to determine how they will be represented. The resulting photographs celebrate the resilience and individuality of each woman, who is shown with items specific to her bioregion and everyday life—rooted in tradition yet very much of the modern world.
Collections
Additional Details
Provenance
2021: Hamilton College (Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art), by purchase from Bockley Gallery.
Signature
Signed "Cara Romero" at bottom right in ink.
Inscribed
"9/12" at lower left in ink;
"Naomi" at lower center in ink.
"Naomi" at lower center in ink.
Sharon Lockhart
Date: 2008
Medium: Three chromogenic prints
Object number: 2014.1.a-c
Jamea Richmond-Edwards
Date: 2018
Medium: Pigment print with silkscreen diamond dust and gold foil
Object number: 2020.1
Dyani White Hawk
Date: 2019
Medium: Screenprint with metallic foil
Object number: 2020.4.1
Dyani White Hawk
Date: 2019
Medium: Screenprint with metallic foil
Object number: 2020.4.2
Dyani White Hawk
Date: 2019
Medium: Screenprint with metallic foil
Object number: 2020.4.3
Dyani White Hawk
Date: 2019
Medium: Screenprint with metallic foil
Object number: 2020.4.4
Dyani White Hawk
Date: 2019
Medium: Suite of four screenprints with metallic foil
Object number: 2020.4.1-4
Nicario Jiménez Quispe
Date: c. 1992
Medium: Wood and boiled potato and gypsum powder paste with paint
Object number: 2024.6
Unknown artist, Greek (Ancient)
Date: mid 4th century B.C.E.
Medium: Terracotta
Object number: 1929.40