Smithsonian American Art Museum Presents First Major Museum Exhibition To Explore The Achievements Of Native Women Artists
Nationally Touring Exhibition Opens In Washington, D.C., On Feb. 21
January 17, 2020
Women have been a predominant creative force behind Native American art, yet their individual contributions, for centuries, have largely remained unrecognized and anonymous. In the first major thematic exhibition to explore the artistic contributions of Native women, Hearts of Our People: Native Women Artists celebrates the achievements of these Native women and establishes their rightful place in the art world. The critically acclaimed exhibition Hearts of Our People: Native Women Artists was organized by Jill Ahlberg Yohe, associate curator of Native American Art at the Minneapolis Institute of Art, and Teri Greeves, an independent curator and member of the Kiowa Nation. At the core of the exhibition is a firm belief in the power of the collaborative process. The Minneapolis Institute of Art formed an all-female Exhibition Advisory Board, which included Native artists, curators and Native art historians, to generate new interpretations and scholarship relating to the art and its makers, offering multiple perspectives that explore traditional and contemporary voices and techniques foundational to the art of Native women. Hearts of Our People: Native Women Artists will be on view at the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum from Friday, Feb. 21, through Sunday, May 17. Robyn Kennedy, Renwick Gallery manager, is coordinating the presentation in Washington, D.C. The presentation at the Renwick Gallery will include 82 artworks dating from ancient times to the present, made in a variety of media, from textiles and ceramics to sculpture, time-based media and photography. This exhibition is multi-lingual with wall text and labels presented in the artists Native American or First Nations languages, as well as English, aiming to present the works in the context of each artists own culture and voice. We are honored to present this groundbreaking and bold exhibition, designed by and for Native women artists, that showcases their powerful voices and artistic traditions, said Stephanie Stebich, the Margaret and Terry Stent Director at the Smithsonian American Art Museum. We are also delighted to work with our sister Smithsonian museum, the National Museum of the American Indian, in offering dynamic programming to explore questions of modern Native identity and artistic practice. This exhibition also reflects the important work of the Smithsonian American Womens History Initiative focused on amplifying womens voices, reaching new audiences and empowering future generations. Hearts of Our People highlights the traditional and integral role of Native women artists in serving the cultural, economic, diplomatic and domestic needs of their communities, reaching beyond longstanding conventions of treating these artworks as unattributed representations of an entire culture. The exhibition is organized according to three overarching themes: Legacy, Relationships and Power. These themes are a testament to the underlying purpose with which Native women have historically made art and enable visitors to note variations in the works of art created for similar purposes across time and Native cultures. Legacy examines the way in which Native women artists acknowledge their lineage by creating works that simultaneously embody the experience of previous generations, address the present moment and speak to the future. Fiber work by D.Y. Begay (Navajo) and sculptural works by Cherish Parrish (Ottawa/Pottawatomi) are featured in this section of the exhibition. Relationships explores the concept of connectivity and reciprocity that exists beyond the human world to include animals, plants, places and living and nonliving elements. Christi Belcourts (Michif) painting The Wisdom of the Universe
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