Six decades of Northwest Coast
indigenous prints
By Alec Clayton
Published in the Weekly Volcano, May 11, 2017
Ben Davidson (b.1976), Haida First Nation, “Just About,” 2014 screenprint, 28½ x 18½ inches. Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture.
|
Cultural imPRINT: Northwest Coast Prints is an exhibition of some 45 prints by artists from the many Northwest
coastal tribes over a period of six decades. From the earliest works to the
most recent, these prints demonstrate a melding of ancient traditions with the
latest aesthetic practices from the times in which they were made. Perhaps the
most potent commonality is that they all have the visual impact of poster art
combined with sensitive use of space and subtle color modulations. Most have
some variation (in some cases very striking variations) on traditional imagery
and narration. Two things that stand out in most of the prints are the generous
use of white space between and around images and the clever interplay of
positive and negative forms.
“Blueberries,”
embossed lithograph by James Schoppert of the Tlingit Tribe, looks like a photo
of a wall of low-relief sculpture that has been washed with drippy purple and
orange paint and then cut into nine squares and rearranged. It calls for close
observation.
“Brothers Who
Fell From the Sky” by Coast Salish artist IessLIE is a screen print from 2008
that pictures the heads and torsos of two figures depicted as strong geometric
shapes in black and white set side-by-side, with one of them upside-down on a
solid white ground with a yellow circle — the sun perhaps — between them. The
yellow is so light that it almost disappears and seems to hover like a mirage.
Local
contemporary artist Shaun Peterson, Coast Salish from the Puyallup Tribe, is
represented by a digital print called “Daybreak.” It pictures a simple face
with lyrical and circular lines and extremely nuanced color modulations, which
a wall label explains is a hallmark of Coast Salish design. As is the case with
many of the works in this show, there is much more to see in this print than is
evident in a quick glance.
Kelly Cannell’s
“Salish Rope” is a clever screen print with imagery that is almost hidden and
pops out unexpectedly. It is a simple abstract depiction of a coil of rope or
what looks to me like braided hair. Hidden within the coils are figures of women
crawling upward, some in black on white and some in white on black.
Two works that
stand out as quite different from everything else are drawings by the
collaborative team of Tania Willard, Peter Morin and Gabe Hill, a trio of
artists who go by the name New BC Indian Arts and Welfare Society. The two
drawings by this group are done using the old surrealist method of exquisite
corpse, a way of writing or drawing in which none of the collaborating artists
see all of what the others do until the work is finished. In this case, they
folded the drawings so parts drawn by each of them were hidden from view of the
others, and then the parts were cut apart and taped together. The resulting
drawings illustrate Native stories but in a style more like the Chicago
Imagists or “Hairy Who” — quirky and inventive and strangely beautiful.
Another artist in
this show whose work diverges from the Native tradition is John Brent Bennett
of the Haida First Nation, showing two lithographs with dense and repetitive
patterns superimposed over cityscapes and landscapes. His “Henslung” has
circular patterns over a city skyline that are something like lines in a
seismograph. It made me feel as if the city was about to be torn apart.
In the 20-plus
years I’ve been reviewing art in the Pacific Northwest, I’ve seen a lot of
Native art, and this is the best I’ve seen.
Tacoma Art Museum, Tuesday-Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., through Aug. 20, $15, third
Thursday free 10 a.m.-8 p.m., 1701 Pacific Ave. Tacoma,
http://www.tacomaartmuseum.org/
No comments:
Post a Comment