
12 minute read
Prose Don Stoll
from A New Ulster 112
by Amos Greig
BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE: Don Stoll
Don Stoll is a Pushcart-nominated writer living in Southern California. His fiction has appeared twice in A NEW ULSTER and recently in THE SANDY RIVER REVIEW (tinyurl.com/ha2t5eha), INLANDIA (tinyurl.com/322bbv2u), and A THIN SLICE OF ANXIETY (tinyurl.com/fy9wer4h). In 2008, Don and his wife founded their nonprofit (karimufoundation.org) which continues to bring new schools, clean water, and medical clinics to a cluster of remote Tanzanian villages.
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Vanishing Race
by Don Stoll
January 18, 2022
Michael Caruso, Editor-in-Chief
Smithsonian magazine MRC 513, PO Box 37012 Washington, D.C. 20013
Dear Mr. Caruso:
My name is Alvin Dark Cloud. Years ago I won notoriety as an associate—a sort of
“leading follower”—of Dennis Banks and Russell Means in the American Indian Movement.
Lately, health problems have forced me to keep a low profile but I’ve remained active in
promoting the cause of my people.
I write at the urging of my daughter, Dr. Shaliyah Dark Cloud, Associate Professor of
History at The Ohio State University, who has called my attention to a story in Smithsonian’s
December 2021 issue. It concerned the discovery of twenty-one tintype photographs that
had languished in the possession of Ms. Susan Stuart, unknown to her until recently, which
represented part of the estate of her father, Curtis Drake Stuart (1931-1968).
The story described the mystery and controversy generated by the photographs after
Ms. Stuart, living in Tucson, had driven to Phoenix to show them to the Heard Museum.
She thought the pictures would interest an institution dedicated to the advancement of
American Indian art. She also hoped for monetary gain. As you know, the photographs
seemed to represent Native American men and women who had lived in the middle of the
nineteenth century, or earlier.
Yet their condition after half a century in the possession of Ms. Stuart, who conceded
that the grocery bag in which they were stored “with other odds and ends” had been handled
casually, implied a more recent origin. Ms. Benton, author of the story, reported the expert
consensus: the photographs had most likely been made during Curtis Stuart’s lifetime, in all
likelihood by Stuart himself. Ms. Benton reported that the experts could not explain how
this was possible.
I have information to shed light on the mystery. As suggested by the enclosed snapshot
of myself, taken in 1967, a year before Stuart’s death by heart attack, I am the subject of one
of the tintypes. You will have no trouble identifying which of the twenty-one faces matches
mine.
You’ll also see that, despite the facial resemblance to that proud and noble
“representative of a Vanishing Race”—to speak anachronistically and ironically—my face in
1967, at age twenty, evinces neither pride nor nobility. In the snapshot I am drunk. A
girlfriend took the picture in a bar in the dusty town of Sheridan, South Dakota, near Rapid
City. Curtis Stuart found me there in the bar in 1968. Where Sheridan used to be, you will
now see only a filling station with a 7-Eleven store attached. Say good riddance and you’ll get
no argument from me.
I am drunk in the picture the girl took, but I was probably even more drunk when
Stuart found me. He found me because he was looking for drunken Indians to photograph.
I was so drunk when he found me that I have to take his word regarding the
circumstances of our first meeting. But I have no reason to doubt him.
I became aware of Stuart as I regained consciousness on a bed in his suite in the Alex
Johnson Hotel, in Rapid City. I suspected what the smiling, well-dressed white man sitting at
the foot of the bed wanted yet I didn’t fear him. I had sold myself to white men before
because it was a fast way to make a dollar. At that time I had no interest in making a dollar
honestly.
Resting a hand on my belt buckle I said, “Bring me a glass of water and I’ll give you
this.”
He shook his head. He stood and handed me a card. Walking away he said, “Ice?”
The card said CURTIS STUART FINE PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY. I read the
phone number and the Denver address.
I drained the glass of water. I couldn’t speak for a minute because I felt like my head
would fall off from frostbite. When I had thawed out I said, “I can’t let you take pictures
because Denver’s too close and somebody I know might see.”
He said he didn’t take those kinds of pictures. He said did I want a hot shower, and a
shave too if I liked, and could I wait till I was done before he explained about his pictures?
I enjoyed the best shower I’d ever had but I didn’t shave.
When I came out he pointed at the bed and said, “Clean shirt and socks.”
He said he would wait for me in the other room where I might be interested in the hot
meal he had ordered. While I was eating my steak and potatoes he explained his pictures.
He said he had invented a new way to take old-fashioned pictures. He asked if I knew
what tintypes were. I said no so he showed me a book full of them. I had seen pictures like
that before, but I never knew what they were called. I asked what his new way was. I thought
I should be polite because I could see that his new method meant a lot to him.
I nodded while he explained. He watched to make sure I was paying attention. But
between only pretending to pay attention and my poor understanding of chemistry, what he
said went over my head. It’s a shame because what he had achieved was astounding. For my
money computer-generated imagery can’t compare to Curtis Stuart’s method. I wish I could
tell you how it worked. Maybe Ms. Benton can encourage Susan Stuart to search anything
that remains of her father’s estate for his description of the method. He must have written it
down.
Here’s what I know, based on what I recall of his words and my subsequent reading.
He used the wet collodion process invented by Frederick Scott Archer in 1851. But Stuart
had refined it by adding certain chemicals to the immersive solution of collodion, or
cellulose nitrate. His trick lay in the added chemicals, and naturally that’s the part I can tell
you nothing about. But during the stage of fixing the image, the last step before washing and
varnishing, for an interval of maybe fifteen seconds when the image is soaking in the
immersive solution it disappears before reappearing again. The shocking thing Stuart had
accomplished with his added chemicals was to make the photographic subject reappear at an
earlier stage of its development.
He showed me a picture of a wolf. He claimed to have made it by photographing a
stray mutt picked up off the street in Denver. That had been the first use of his method on a
living subject. Since then he had learned to adjust how far back in time to go by adjusting the
amount of added chemicals.
Not quite believing him I said, “So you could make a picture of me as a cave man, or—
He stopped me by taking my hands in his and smiling. It gave me a creepy feeling.
I said, “Noble?”
He put his hand on my chin. It was a soft grip. Even so I started to pull away. His grip
became firm but he spoke in a soothing voice like doctors use before doing something that
will hurt you. I let him tilt my head to the side and run his finger along my cheekbone.
“Haven’t shaved for a while,” he said. “Can’t hold the razor still? But I can shave you.
We’ll want you clean-shaven to show off that classic bone structure.”
He turned my head the other way.
Nobody had ever called me magnificent before. I recall appreciating it a little. But I also
had other feelings about it.
I went along. I still had a creepy feeling but I knew he wasn’t interested in the kind of
funny business I’d worried about at first. He walked around me so he could look from every
angle. I followed him with my head until he had got almost behind me and I needed to turn
my body.
It was a commanding voice instead of the soothing one.
When I could see him again he was nodding his head like he approved.
“Flat and hard,” he said, patting my stomach. “It won’t be like that in a few years if you
keep living like you do. You’re lucky that you’re young enough to get away with it for now.”
It was true but I didn’t like hearing it. You could say I decided to take it because I owed
him for the meal and the clean clothes and for getting me out of the bar at a time when I
was going so bad that every bender could have been my last. But the truth is that I didn’t
know how to stand up for myself. I felt like nothing so I didn’t know what I could have
stood up for.
He said, “Ready to be photographed?” and I said, “You want me to put the shirt back
on?”
“Won’t matter,” he said. “Suit yourself.”
He said we had to go down the street to where he had rented space to take and develop
his pictures. I took the shirt. I reckoned he wouldn’t bring me back to the hotel once he was
done.
I recall very little about the studio and everything about the dark room. It’s funny that it
happened this way, but in the dark room I was wide awake after almost falling asleep in the
studio even though you can see from the photograph that it was brightly lit. The alcohol was
still in my system and I think in the studio it started to catch up to me again. As for why I
would have been awake in the dark room, I’m coming to that.
Stuart must have had a hell of a time photographing me. Never mind that I’m standing
up proud and straight in the picture, I only look that way because he had somehow propped
me up.
I remember him saying “Done!” in a sharp voice that brought me to my senses. I asked
what came next. He said he needed to develop the picture but that didn’t concern me so I
should leave. I said would he mind if I followed him into the dark room. He gave me a
suspicious look and I said I was curious. I promised not to touch anything.
“I’ve photographed twenty other Indians and they all left right away,” he said.
I expected to get a no but instead he said, “Why not?”
Maybe he had decided I was harmless. Or maybe he was so pleased with his new
process that he wanted to show it off to someone, even if it was only a drunken Indian.
In the dark room he explained about the image disappearing in the immersive solution
for a few seconds. He said it was more than a chemical process. It also had a deeper
meaning.
“You belong to a vanishing race. Your choice of how to live makes you complicit in the
disappearance of your people. The drunk hastens to an early death, prefigured by the
vanishing of your image in this solution.”
His words didn’t seem as insulting as they should have because I was paying less
attention to what he was saying than to what he was doing. I wanted to see my picture. I
wished he would stop talking. But he had a hard time doing that.
“What will appear is an image of yourself as you would have looked if the Europeans
had never arrived. Your people were doomed because the Europeans brought the superior
civilization demanded by the imperative of historical progress. But during their all-too-
fleeting time your people were noble and beautiful and we can still savor their bygone
virtues.”
The appearance of the image finally shut him up. By this time I was as grateful for that
as I was for the picture itself. It’s a crude thing to say because you know how beautiful the
picture is.
Stuart lingered over it for a long time. Then he turned to look at me. His eyes opened
wide and he sucked in his breath and gave a kind of little jump.
He said, “Let’s go out into the light so I can—
He never made it. He sat down on the floor in the dark. He said something was
pressing against his chest. I didn’t know he was having a heart attack because in the movies
you grab your chest. He didn’t do that. But I could see he needed help so I went out into the
studio.
There was a table with a phone on it against the wall. I picked it up but then dropped it
when I saw myself in the mirror above the table. My image in the picture had been
transformed and so had I. I had worn Stuart’s clean shirt to be photographed. But in the
picture I was bare-chested and I had become bare-chested, too. In the mirror I could see
scars that hadn’t been there before. I realized that they were from the Sun Dance. I probed
the tiny mounds of scar tissue.
When I had first looked in the mirror I wanted to run. But the scars gave me strength. I
called for an ambulance and went to check on Stuart.
If he had been alive I would have stayed with him. I couldn’t help, though, and I didn’t
want to be there when the ambulance came. In the washroom next to the studio I scrubbed
the paint off my face. As I finished washing I heard the siren. I left.
In the street, if anybody had asked why I didn’t have a shirt on I would have pointed to
my scars and said that in feeling them I also felt my life had changed. But I passed only white
people. They wouldn’t have understood.
After this it was just a matter of time before I would connect with the American Indian
Movement. If you print my letter, Mr. Caruso, maybe some of Stuart’s other Indian models
will come forward with stories about how their lives were transformed.
Although Curtis Drake Stuart was a talented photographer, he never understood what
he may have thought would be the defining subject of his career. He thought my people
were a vanishing race. But we haven’t gone away. No, sir: we’re still here.
Sincerely,
Alvin Dark Cloud
END