Harpoons with a bone tip were used to hunt seals, dolphins and sea birds.
The Shoort spirits Télil, representing the sky of rain (northern sky), and Shénu, representing the sky of wind (western sky).
It was not uncommon for white men to kidnap tribal natives and bring them to the capitals of Europe (including Paris, Berlin, and Zurich), where they were exhibited in zoos and parks, as well as held in universities to be studied. No less than Charles Darwin described his first meeting with the native Fuegians as being “without exception the most curious and interesting spectacle I ever beheld: I could not have believed how wide the difference between savage and civilized man: it is greater than between wild and domesticated animal, in as much as in man there is a greater power of improvement.”
Such extraordinary hubris seems pathological of the race that declared for itself the “white man’s burden” of “civilizing” native populations by employing their long-held foreign policies of genocide, pestilence, and psychological warfare. We are deeply fortunate that Martin Gusinde, a German priest and ethnologist, took an entirely different approach. In 1919, Gusinde was sent as a missionary to Tierra del Fuego, with the aim to convert the natives to Christianity. Instead, the opposite took place: Gusinde was one of the first Westerners to be initiated into the sacred rites of the native people.
Ulen is a clown-like male spirit, whose role is to entertain the audience of the Hain.
During the course of four tips made between 1919 and 1924, Gusinde documented the Selk’nam, Yamana, and Kawésqar, taking more than 1,200
photographs, which he produced in a portable darkroom. These photographs are collected in The Lost Tribes of Tierra Del Fuego: Selk’nam, Yamana, Kawésqar, photographs by Martin Gusinde, edited by Christine Barthe and Xavier Barral (Thames & Hudson), an extraordinary volume of photographs reproduced in sumptuous tritone.
The Lost Tribes of Tierra Del Fuego presents the people and their way of life, a way of life that has all but disappeared but for these photographs. Gusinde meticulously documented the tribes’ rituals and practices, which are revealed here. His straightforward approach to photography, when combined with the sacred costumes and makeup of the tribes, take on an ethereal, otherworldly energy that makes the work that is at once beautiful, lyrical, and haunting.
Among the most spiritual photographs in the book are those taken documenting the Hain ceremony. As the book explains, “Originally the rite for young men aged between seventeen and twenty, the Hain ceremony was organized by men and kept secret from the women. Punctuated by rituals, dances, songs, games and performances it cemented Selk’nam society together. The ceremony, which could last more than a year, was based around the Selk’nam origin myth.”
In his fourth and final trip in 1923, Gusinde took part in the Hain ceremony, and brought his camera along. We are fortunate for this, for the Selk’nam Genocide would decimate the population from 4,000 to 100, with the last full blooded member dying in 1974. Thus, The Lost Tribes of Tierra Del Fuego becomes more than a monograph, it becomes a memorial to a people and a culture that were vanished from this earth.
All images © Anthropos Institute, Sankt Augustin, Germany. Book cover image courtesy Thames & Hudson.
Miss Rosen is a New York-based writer, curator, and brand strategist. There is nothing she adores so much as photography and books. A small part of her wishes she had a proper library, like in the game of Clue. Then she could blaze and write soliloquies to her in-and-out-of-print loves.