|
|
| The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
 |
Established in 1996 |
|
Monday, December 29, 2025 |
|
| The Des Moines Art Center celebrates its 76th edition of the Iowa Artists exhibition series featuring Henry Payer |
|
|
Henry Payer, Ho-Chunk (b. 1986), No Place Like Home, 2024, Courtesy of the artist.
|
DES MOINES, IA.- For the 76th edition of Iowa Artists, the annual exhibition celebrating homegrown creativity, the Des Moines Art Center welcomes Sioux City, IA-born artist Henry Payer (b. 1986). A member of the Ho-Chunk tribe, whose ancestral territory spans areas in Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois, and Iowa, Payer explores his history and identity as an Indigenous American in his exhibition titled Aagakinąk Haciwi: We Live Opposite Each Other. The show features the artists signature mixed media works that combine imagery from both Native traditions and Western popular culture. Through layering and recombining material drawn from personal experience and archival research, he creates a unique visual language. Referencing dispossessed Native people, who, without access to animal hides and birchbark, began illustrating and recording events onto ledger books, Payer makes contemporary ledger art in which antique accounting paper serves as the basis for his collages and paintings. In another series, the artist references the fraught history of government-issued blankets by using this fabric as a substrate for his work.
On view in the A.H. Blank Gallery will be collages inspired both by historical archives and personal experience. Payer engages the long history of colonial commercialization of Native culture by bringing together materials such as 19th-century photographs and postcards with references to contemporary advertising and branding. The Winnebago RV, produced from the early 1960s to the late 2000s, recurs frequently in his work as a reminder of the continuing life of the word Winnebago, a term used by white settlers to describe the Ho-Chunk that persists today. For Payer, the RV symbolizes the multiple forced migrations his ancestors endured after their removal by the United States government.
Payers signature wry humor is apparent in pieces such as No Place Like Home, in which he depicts a pair of glittering ruby slippers, a reference to Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz (1939). The artists Dorothy wears regalia adorned with decorative ribbon appliqué, a traditional artform for the Ho-Chunk, designed by Payer to recall the poppy flowers that put Dorothy to sleep, forgetting her quest to find a way home. Payer transforms imagery from the movie into a meditation on dislocation and memory. Dorothy could click her heels and return home, but the Ho-Chunk cannot, he explains.
The Kyle J. and Sharon Krause Atrium will showcase a project that represents a new direction for Payer: a nine-foot-long papier-mâché canoe that symbolizes the long history of displacement endured by his people and provides inspiration for the exhibitions title. Aagakinąk Haciwi: We Live Opposite Each Other, encompasses multiple meanings. The root word aagaki means on each side, implying opposite sides of a river, while haci refers to a house or denotes where one lives. This concept speaks to the experience of neighbors sharing space across a divide. In this show, Payers work speaks to the coexistence of peoples and perspectives past and present.
Aagakinąk Haciwi: We Live Opposite Each Other is on view from January 17, 2026 through June 17, 2026 in the A.H. Blank Gallery and Kyle J. and Sharon Krause Atrium. The exhibition is curated by Elizabeth Gollnick, associate curator. The show is accompanied by a 28-page richly illustrated, complimentary gallery guide that includes a scholarly essay by the curator and an interview with the artist.
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|