fbpx
facebook app symbol  twitter  linkedin  instagram 1
 

A new book, In Light and Shadow: A Photographic History from Indigenous America, gathers more than 250 images by Indigenous photographers from the 1800s to today.

The project grew out of a much earlier effort. Photographer Brian Adams (Iñupiaq) and author Sarah Stacke first teamed up for the 400 Years Project, created around the 400th anniversary of the Mayflower’s arrival. 

Screenshot 2025 11 28 102949

That project built a digital library of Indigenous photographers across generations. When a publisher came across their research, the idea for a book took shape.

“The big shift from the 400 Years Project to this book was adding writing that connects each photo to the person who made it,” Stacke told Native News Online. “That relationship, between image and maker, is really the heart of the project.”

The book includes studio portraits from the early 1900s, family snapshots, trapping scenes in Alaska, and contemporary fine-art photography. The publisher wanted a balance that leaned historic, but the team quickly learned that “historic” didn’t mean scarce.

“We worried we wouldn’t find enough early Indigenous photographers,” Stacke said. “But we found so many that choosing was the hard part.”

Their final selection focused on geography, genre, and generation, trying to cover as many regions and types of photography as possible.

Stacke also uncovered stories like that of John Meek Jr., a Native Hawaiian who ran a photography studio in 1867. His glass plates were auctioned off and never found, but their existence suggests an even deeper history waiting in archives, basements, and family closets.

Adams handled most of the contemporary photography selections, drawing on years of community-building through Indigenous Photograph, the database he helped create. Growing up in Alaska, he didn’t have Indigenous photographers to look toward. 

“I loved photography, but I didn’t see anyone like me doing it,” Adams said. “I want younger Native photographers to have something I didn’t, to see that this work has always been happening.”

Stacke spent years contacting descendants, relatives, and archives to make sure each photograph was accurately contextualized. 

“There were a lot of emails,” Stacke said. “But representation has to be done carefully.”

The team is already sharing the project through talks and upcoming exhibitions, including a talk at the Anchorage Museum, a 2026 exhibition with Obscura Gallery in Santa Fe, and an event in New York next spring. They’re open to more opportunities as the book reaches more readers.

“It’s a celebration of the photographers who were here before us and the ones working today,” Adams said. “We’ve always been here.”

More Stories Like This

Chickasaw Holiday Art Market Returns to Sulphur on Dec. 6
Center for Native Futures Hosts Third Mound Summit on Contemporary Native Arts
Filmmakers Defend ‘You’re No Indian’ After Demand to Halt Screenings
A Native American Heritage Month Playlist You Can Listen to All Year Long
11 Native Actors You Should Know

Help us defend tribal sovereignty. 

At Native News Online, our mission is rooted in telling the stories that strengthen sovereignty and uplift Indigenous voices — not just at year’s end, but every single day.

Because of your generosity last year, we were able to keep our reporters on the ground in tribal communities, at national gatherings and in the halls of Congress — covering the issues that matter most to Indian Country: sovereignty, culture, education, health and economic opportunity.

That support sustained us through a tough year in 2025. Now, as we look to the year ahead, we need your help right now to ensure warrior journalism remains strong — reporting that defends tribal sovereignty, amplifies Native truth, and holds power accountable.

Levi headshotThe stakes couldn't be higher. Your support keeps Native voices heard, Native stories told and Native sovereignty defended.

Stand with Warrior Journalism today.

Levi Rickert (Potawatomi), Editor & Publisher

 
About The Author
Kaili Berg
Author: Kaili BergEmail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Staff Reporter
Kaili Berg (Aleut) is a member of the Alutiiq/Sugpiaq Nation, and a shareholder of Koniag, Inc. She is a staff reporter for Native News Online and Tribal Business News. Berg, who is based in Wisconsin, previously reported for the Ho-Chunk Nation newspaper, Hocak Worak. She went to school originally for nursing, but changed her major after finding her passion in communications at Western Technical College in Lacrosse, Wisconsin.