Name Alfred Bush | ||
Children Paul Tioux (b. April 13, 1958) | ||
Alfred L. Bush (born 1933), curator, writer, editor, and bibliophile, is the retired Curator of Western Americana at the Princeton University Library. He was an editor of the Papers of Thomas Jefferson, where his study of Jefferson images produced The Life Portraits of Thomas Jefferson (1962). Bush is the author of numerous books and scholarly articles, many of which pertain to Native Americans.
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Career
From 1958 through 1962 Bush was an editor of the Papers of Thomas Jefferson. His publication The Life Portraits of Thomas Jefferson (1962) has subsequently gone through several editions, including two published by the National Gallery of Art, in The Eye of Thomas Jefferson and Jefferson and the Arts, both edited by William Howard Adams. Bush discovered the lost 1800 portrait of Jefferson by Rembrandt Peale, which was announced in his 1962 monograph. This image of the president has since eclipsed all others and is the painting most familiar to the public; it now hangs in the White House and is featured on the Jefferson nickel.
During Bush’s forty years as Curator of Western Americana at Princeton University Library, he enlarged the size of the collection tenfold and added a collection of photographs of American Indians and an archival component of papers on twentieth-century American Indian Affairs. In the 1970s he aided Princeton’s recruitment of American Indian students and acted as their undergraduate advisor. After the 1990 enactment of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act he also served as Princeton University’s Curator for Repatriation. Bush taught courses at Princeton University on Native American subjects in the departments of English, Art, and Archaeology, and in 1981 a course on Mayan Literature in the department of Anthropology. In 1971 he taught Art of the American Indian at Trinity College, Hartford, Connecticut. He was awarded a fellowship to spend a sabbatical year at the Huntington Library, San Marino, California.
Bush served for three decades on the editorial board of the Princeton University Library Chronicle, and was its editor from 1962 to 1977. He is also the founding editor of Princeton History, first issued in 1971.
In retirement Bush advises institutions facing issues of repatriation of American Indian remains and artifacts. He also serves on the visiting committee of the Arts of Africa, Oceania, and the Americas of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.
Curated exhibitions
Published books and articles
Biography
Born in Denver, Colorado, into a fifth-generation Mormon family, Bush graduated from Brigham Young University in 1957, where he continued graduate studies in archaeology before joining the Fifth University Archaeological Society excavations at the Maya site of Aguacatal in western Campeche, Mexico, in the winter of 1958. The following summer he was a student at the Institute for Archival and Historical Management at Radcliffe College.
A mountain climber in his youth, Bush climbed in the Colorado Rockies, the Tetons, and the Swiss Alps. He subsequently served as curator of the American Alpine Club’s museum in New York City.
Bush served in the Medical Service Corps of the US Army in the Panama Canal Zone during the Korean War.
Bush's legally adopted son, Paul Tioux, is an enrolled member of Tesuque Pueblo. Tioux's three daughters have given birth to nine children, Bush's great-grandchildren.