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Yeffe kimball biography sampler

          Yeffe Kimball (c.!

          In yeffe kimball, a white woman, launched a career as a.

        1. In yeffe kimball, a white woman, launched a career as a.
        2. Yeffe Kimball's brazen appropriation of a Native identity.
        3. Yeffe Kimball (c.
        4. For a discussion of 3 white artists passing themselves off as native (Yeffe Kimball, Randy Lee White and Jimmie Durham), see Bill Anthes, Native Moderns.
        5. Kimball, Yeffe and Helen Jean Anderson.
        6. Yeffe Kimball facts for kids

          Yeffe Kimball, born Effie Goodman, (March 30, 1906– April 11, 1978) was an American artist known for her abstract modernist work with Native American and space exploration subjects.

          Kimball created work under an assumed Osage Indian identity, rising to prominence after her admittance of the painting Sacred Buffalo into the Philbrook Museum of Art's first Indian Annual in Tulsa, Oklahoma, in 1946.

          Biography

          Born Effie Violetta Goodman to white parents, Oather Alvis Goodman and Martha Clementine Smith on March 30, 1906, her residence in 1910 was Rayville, Missouri.

          Kimball claimed to have been born in 1914 in Mountain Park, Oklahoma. Kimball was the fourth of at least nine children.

          Kimball's last name is the result of her first annulled marriage, which likely enabled her to erase her previous identity.

          Kimball cited a fabricated background of an Osage father known as “Other Good-Man” or “Other Good-Man Smith”, but there are no Osage records th