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Tuesday, February 4, 2025 |
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"Woven Being" celebrates the diversity of Indigenous art and stories |
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Teri Greeves, My Family's Tennis Shoes, 2003. Cotton, rubber, beads, glass, metal, thread, ink. Dimensions: Woman's shoes (each): 15.2 × 8.9 × 26.7 cm (6 × 3 1/2 × 10 1/2 in.) Baby's shoes (each): 7 × 5.1 × 12.1 cm (2 3/4 × 2 × 4 3/4 in.).
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EVANSTON, IL.- Through the perspectives of four collaborating artists with connections to ZhegagoynakAndrea Carlson (Grand Portage Ojibwe/European descent), Kelly Church (Match-E-Be-Nash-She-Wish Tribe of Pottawatomi/Ottawa), Nora Moore Lloyd (Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe), and Jason Wesaw (Pokagon Band of Potawatomi) Woven Being explores confluences that are continuing to shape Indigenous creative practices in the region and beyond.
The Chicagoland region is a longstanding cultural and economic hub for Indigenous peoples, including the Council of Three Fires the Ojibwe, Potawatomi, and Odawaas well as the Menominee, Miami, Ho-Chunk, Sac, Fox, Kickapoo, and Illinois nations. People from many Indigenous nations call the region home today, and the city of Chicago has the third-largest urban Indigenous population in the United States.
Despite this rich history, Indigenous voices have often been excluded from Chicago's art histories. This silence is harmful. Guided by Indigenous collaborations, priorities, and voices, the exhibition foregrounds the perspectives of Indigenous artists currently based in the city and those from nations forcibly displaced from the area in the nineteenth century.
Collaborating artists have partnered with The Block to create constellations of their own artwork and historical and contemporary artworks, primarily by Indigenous artists of the region. Overall Woven Being will present more than 80 works by 33 artists that speak to the diversity of Indigenous art, materials, and time, including several new and commissioned works and installations. Selections highlight themes we have identified in dialogue with diverse project advisors: kinship between materials, relations across regional landways and waterways, and the weaving together of past, present, and future.
Seen together, the exhibition works form intimate and interwoven stories that resist monolithic storytelling. Instead of a comprehensive overview of regional art, Woven Being integrates four Indigenous perspectives of Chicagolands layered art histories. Such perspectives are central not only to understanding Chicago and its region, but also to understanding the widely interconnected Indigenous stories that have been, and continue to be, woven across the entirety of Turtle Island (North America).
A 160-page multi-authored publication centers Indigenous voices and explores the exhibitions expansive themes and questions. This book will be available midway through the exhibition run to document the installation and represent the constellations of artwork and thoughtful juxtapositions
Following an introduction by the exhibitions co-curators, contributors Blaire Morseau (Pokagon Band of Potawatomi), Denise Lajimodiere (Turtle Mountain Band of Ojibwe), John Low (Pokagon Band of Potawatomi), and Anne Terry Straus and Jacqueline Lopez expand on the collaborating artists contributions from their own disciplinary and personal vantage points, These chapters are interspersed with poetry and prose, including by Heid Erdrich (Turtle Mountain Band of Ojibwe), Mark LaRoque (White Earth Ojibwe), and Mark Turcotte (Turtle Mountain Band of Ojibwe), a resource guide focusing on Chicagos Indigenous-led arts organizations, and installation views of the exhibition.
The Woven Being book is published by The Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University, produced by Marquand Books, Seattle , designed by OTAMI, Montreal, and distributed by the University of Washington Press (Forthcoming in Spring 2025.)
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