First American Art Magazine No. 21, Winter 2018/19 | Page 12
EDITOR’S GREETING
M
ANY TERMS or catego-
ries serve to stymie Native
art conversation, such as
art vs. craft. Decade after
decade these terms keep the conversa-
tion moving in small, repeating circles.
So what are useful lenses through which
to view Indigenous art of the Americas?
What frames are relevant, not
only to installation art in museums but
also to non-Western art forms made
and displayed in the context their tribal
communities intended? Porcupine
quillwork, an art form unique to North
America, is my personal litmus test. If a
proposed methodology can’t discuss quill-
work, then it cannot adequately discuss
Indigenous art of the Americas.
Formalism has long been a go-to
approach for analyzing Native art. This
prevailing approach to studying visual art
of the mid-20th century is analyzing an
art form based on its observable qualities,
privileging sight but potentially including
any sensory information, such as an
aroma or a sound. Yet, formalism decon-
textualizes an artwork from its origins,
the process of its creation, its maker, its
maker’s intentions, the meaning behind
its symbolism, and many other intangible
concepts surrounding the work.
Back in 2009, heather ahtone
(Choctaw-Chickasaw) published an
essay, “Designed to Last: Striving toward
an Indigenous American Aesthetic,” in
which she clearly outlines a practical
methodology for critiquing Native art
based on Indigenous values. Her later
essay, “Reading Beneath the Surface:
Joe Feddersen's Parking Lot” (Wíčazo
Ša Review, 2012), provides an example
of implementing her methodology on a
specific artwork (a glass vase sculpted by
Okanagan-Sinixt artist Joe Feddersen).
ahtone has continued to flesh out and
refine her Indigenous methodology to four
lenses: materiality, metaphor/symbolism,
kincentricity, and temporality. 1
Materiality is an examination of the
physical media, which includes looking at
historical use of those media by the artist’s
community, or ways the artist uses novel
or new media. How do artists gather the
materials and how do they process them?
For example, in her profile in this issue,
Linda Aguilar (Chumash) describes
horsehair and linen that she uses to make
baskets, both of which are used histori-
cally in utilitarian baskets, but both were
introduced by Europeans to her commu-
nity. She makes potent statements about
complex interpretations of economic
value when she adds abalone shell or
poker chips to her baskets.
These choices bleed into the lens
of metaphor/symbolism. ahtone writes
that “for an oral-based community …
knowledge was often coded into visual
references.…” 2 These layers of symbolism
can be semirepresentational and inferred
without specialized knowledge—or
highly abstracted and require instruction
to decode. An example of symbolism is
Choctaw-Chickasaw painter Norma
Howard building up her soft, atmospheric
watercolors with minute strokes of paint
mimicking the weave of Choctaw river-
cane basketry. These baskets are integral
to Choctaw self-representation, and their
geometric shapes hold symbolic meaning
in tandem with practical forms used, for
instance, in drying herbal medicines.
Kincentricity was coined by Dennis
Martinez (O’odham-Chicano) and, as he
says, describes “where we have a rela-
tionship not only with our immediate
biological family, our extended family,
our tribe, our clan, our community, but
also with plants and animals out in the
natural world.” 3 Kincentricity is based on
reciprocity. How does an artwork refer-
ence relationships, perhaps from the artist
to other members of her or his tribe or to
other artists? As described in the feature
article “Bááháálí Chapter Young Weavers,”
Elouise Washburn and Gloria Skeet (both
1. heather ahtone, “Cultural Paradigms of Contemporary Indigenous Art: As Found in the Work of Shan
Goshorn, Norman Akers, Marie Watt, and Joe Feddersen” (PhD diss., University of Oklahoma, 2018), 66–67.
2. Ibid., 66.
3. Dennis Martinez, interview by David E. Hall, Native Perspectives on Sustainability (January 3, 2008), 3, PDF.
4. ahtone, “Cultural Paradigms of Contemporary Indigenous Art,” 68–69.
10 | WWW.FIRSTAMERICANARTMAGAZINE.COM
Navajo) used weaving wool as a means to
bring together elders and young people
from their community, the Bááháálí
Chapter, within the larger Navajo Nation.
The finished rugs and purses also speak
to the symbiotic relationship the humans
have with the sheep.
Temporality is when “the artist
is positioned within a time-space
continuum that is informed by personal
experience, family and tribal history, and
works within a network of influences and
possible materials.” 4 In his photo essay,
Lester Harragarra (Otoe-Missouria-
Kiowa) photographs Apsáalooke people
celebrating the 100th annual Crow Fair.
This milestone allows them to reflect
upon where they stand as a people in 2018
compared to a century ago. Harragarra
emphasizes the passage of time by juxta-
posing people of all ages. He further
hones in on the joyous reflection of time
passing with his photograph of Charlie
and Ramona Real Bird celebrating their 57
years of marriage in the Adali and Norma
Falls Down 50th Wedding Anniversary
category in the Crow Fair parade.
This is a precursory introduction
to these concepts, but even so, I am
confident that considering materiality,
metaphor/symbolism, kincentricity,
and temporality when studying Native
art will help to more deeply read and
reflect on the works. Indeed, these are
doors to greater understanding and
insight into Indigenous perspectives that
can be applied to all art forms, not just
Native art.
—America Meredith
above
America Meredith
(Cherokee Nation), Sun Circle
2012, Oklahoma red clay,
gypsum, mica, acrylic medium,
12 × 12 in., private collection.