Michener Art Museum Presents Contemporary Work By Lenape (Also Called Delaware) Artists
“Never Broken: Visualizing Lenape Histories” Opens This Fall
September 08, 2023
The James A. Michener Art Museum in Doylestown, Pa., is pleased to present Never Broken: Visualizing Lenape Histories, an exhibition that considers the power of art to construct and dismantle inaccurate Indigenous histories through a dynamic display of contemporary work by Lenape (also called Delaware) artists in dialogue with historic Lenape ceramics, beadwork, and other cultural objects and representations of Penns Treaty by European American artists. On view Sept. 9 to Jan. 14, 2024, Never Broken features recent and newly commissioned work by Ahchipaptunhe (Delaware Tribe of Indians and Cherokee), Joe Baker (Delaware Tribe of Indians), Holly Wilson (Delaware Nation and Cherokee), and Nathan Young (Delaware Tribe of Indians, Pawnee, and Kiowa) that expresses personal and tribal identity and address the Lenapes violent displacement from Lenapehoking, the Lenape homeland which encompasses the region where the Michener Art Museum currently stands. Curated by Joe Baker, co-founder and executive director of Lenape Center in Manhattan, and Laura Turner Igoe, Ph.D., chief curator at the Michener Art Museum, Never Broken will include approximately 50 artworks and objects from 10 private and institutional lenders. It will be accompanied by an illustrated catalogue with essays by Baker, Igoe, and Brooklyn-based writer Joel Whitney that will be published later this fall. We are excited to share this groundbreaking exhibition with our visitors. Through a focus on Lenape art and culture and a critical examination of historical visualizations of Native and European American relationships, Never Broken demonstrates the ways in which art can create, challenge, and rewrite history, states Igoe. The Michener Museum of Art has assembled the legitimate heirs to Lenapehoking in this evocative new exhibit, Never Broken: Visualizing Lenape Histories. Four contemporary Lenape artists through their arts practice push back against a silenced history and shed light on one of the worlds most horrific genocides, added Baker. The exhibition interrogates many prints, paintings, and decorative arts that incorporate imagery from Benjamin Wests iconic painting Penns Treaty with the Indians (1771-72). Wests composition depicting a treaty of peace between the Pennsylvania Provinces founder William Penn and Tamanend, Chief of the Lenni-Lenape Turtle Clan, praised by Anglo-Americans as an agreement that was never broken went viral in a pre-internet age, appearing on textiles, fine porcelain, and other printed material in the late 18th and 19th centuries. Bucks County painter Edward Hicks (1780-1849) appropriated Wests composition for his own paintings of Penns Treaty (a recent Michener acquisition) and incorporated the scene into his well-known Peaceable Kingdom series. Paintings of Penns Treaty by Hicks and others attempted to rewrite the fraught history of Native and Anglo-American conflict with a myth of peaceful co-existence. To counter this narrative, the exhibition features historic and contemporary Lenape art demonstrating that the Lenapes ties to the area were, unlike Penns Treaty, never broken. Surrounding the installation of a carved and painted Big House post, central to the Lenape belief system, will be paintings by Joe Baker and the sculpture Bloodline by Holly Wilson, which explore the artists lineage and tribal identity. Large-scale abstract paintings by Ahchipaptunhe, newly commissioned for the exhibition, respond to the geometric forms and shapes inscribed on Lenape pottery and decorated splint wood baskets borrowed from the New Jersey State Museum. Nineteenth century bandolier bags and contemporary beadwork by Joe Baker underscore the continuing legacy and evolution of Lenape visual expression and cross-cultural exchange. Never Broken encourages visitors to think critically about historical images and colonial narratives and to consider an Indigenous perspective as an important part of the history of the Delaware Valley. Never Broken: Visualizing Lenape Histories is one in a series of American art exhibitions created through a multi-year, multi-institutional partnership formed by the Philadelphia Museum of Art as part of the Art Bridges Cohort Program. The Michener Art Museum is located at 138 S. Pine St. To learn more, visit www.michenerartmuseum.org.
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