Photograph depicts a large rock formation, taken from below and at a distance, which Maude has identified as El Morro or Inscription Rock. He is likely referring to the El Morro National Monument, a great standstone promontory. The site is known as A'ts'ina ("place of writing on the rock" in Zuni).
Photograph depicts a rock wall, likely at A'ts'ina ("place of writing on the rock" in Zuni), also known as El Morro National Monument or Inscription Rock, in El Morro, New Mexico.
Photograph of what is likely the Zuni Pueblo taken from the S.W. The photograph shows low buildings on a hill, what appears to be a garden, and figures in the foreground.
Photograph depicts A'ts'ina ("place of writing on the rock" in Zuni) in El Morro, New Mexico. The site is also referred to as the El Morro National Monument or Inscription Rock, and consists of a sandstone promonotory upon which travelers for several centuries have left inscriptions. The inscriptions shown in this photograph include names and dates from the mid 19th century, as well as a large inscription in what appears to be Spanish.
Two children examine part of a set piece from a performance of a piece by Evelyn Roth. The set piece is made of fabric and depicts what looks to be a face, under which is a picture of a creature with a human body and a sun face.