Native American
art at the Washington State History Museum
By Alec Clayton
Published in the Weekly Volcano, July 6, 2017
“Bear II” steel sculpture by Jason Reed Brown, photo courtesy Washington State History Museum |
There is a small
but interesting show of Northwest Native American art now on display at the
Washington State History Museum in Tacoma. The 12th annual In the Spirit: Northwest Native Art juried exhibition includes 22
works by artists from Alaska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Washington, and Canada, displayed in two adjacent galleries.
Over the 20-some
years I have reviewed contemporary Native art, one overriding claim has been
proclaimed of the art, and that is that it blends the traditional and
contemporary. But most of the art in these shows, with a very few exceptions,
has been much more traditional than contemporary, if by contemporary we mean in
the Western art canon. In many instances, the only contemporary thing about the
art is the choice of materials. Blown, fused and sculpted glass, for instance,
is common in contemporary Native art, but the use of modern materials does not
necessarily make the art contemporary in concept or aesthetics.
But this show
blends the traditional and the contemporary more than usual. There are more
wholly- abstract works in this exhibition than
in any Native art show I’ve seen, and more time-honored images rendered in a
modern style. An excellent example can be seen in Linley B. Logan's "Red
Road Red Carpet," linoleum and paint. This picture has the look of a
modern graphic novel, with a fierce warrior wearing a bowtie and holding
feathers, while on his sleeve he wears the images of two faces that could have
been lifted right out of Picasso's “Demoiselles d'Avignon.” Or Jennifer Wood's
"She's Always Looking for Mountains." It is a fairly traditional
wooden mask, but on top of the mask like hair standing on end is a field of
plastic straws, LED lights, ribbon and shimmer pigment that can be seen as a
glowing mountain range, making for a startlingly modern image.
Celeste Kardonsky
Dybeck’s “Kardonsky Family Tree” was named Best in Show. It is her own family
portrait, which she calls “a mysterious family.” The father is represented by a
raven, the mother is the moon, and the children are waves. It is a child-like
tapestry made of wool, suede and mother-of-pearl buttons.
There is a strong
industrial look to Jason Reed Brown’s two steel sculptures “Bear II” and
“Hummingbird II,” most noticeably “Bear II,” a profile of a bear’s face embedded
in punched, raised, riveted and bent steel.
A favorite of
mine is Ryan Feddersen’s “Manifest Signs (I).” This bright sculptural work
features colorful flat cutout bison heads in pink, orange, blue and raised an inch above the surface of a flat white surface, upon which
has been painted the stark black shadow of power lines and poles. Wall text
explains that it represents 270 million bison slaughtered by settlers,
businesses and the United States military. The balance of black and white, the
sharp contrasts of color and shape, and the bright, colorful and almost playful
representation of the horror of wiping out the bison combine to make for
compelling art.
One of the most original works in
concept is Erin Genia’s “Dakota in the Pacific Northwest.” A cascade of rain
(“jingles”) hangs from a circular cloud made of
cloth that hangs from the ceiling, and floating in the center is a quilted
“morning star” in diamond-shaped panels of red, yellow, orange, pink, white and
yellow. A wall label describes it as embodying “the beauty and resilience of
our people even when far from home” after the Dakota were exiled from their
homeland in Minnesota.
I hope many of our readers will visit this exhibit.
In the Spirit
Northwest Native Art, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Tue.-Sun. and 10 a.m.-8 p.m.
Third Thursday, through Aug. 20, $8-$12 museum admission, free for members and
free for all after 2 p.m. for Third Thursday Art Walk, 1911 Pacific Ave.,
Tacoma.
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