Tiny beads the size of sand are arranged inside a gold-framed necklace amulet, forming a portrait of Pocahontas, the leader who symbolizes both the romanticization of Native American women and their erasure.
The delicate, wearable artwork by Keri Ataumbi (Kiowa/Comanche) and Jamie Okuma (Luiseño/Shoshone-Bannock) is one of 117 pieces on display in the revolutionary show "Hearts of Our People: Native Women Artists" at the Minneapolis Institute of Art. The exhibit is the first ever at a major institution to focus solely on the contributions of Native women artists, with a key aim of making them, and their accomplishments, visible.
The groundbreaking show includes 115 artists from the U.S. and Canada spanning more than 50 tribes, 65 languages and seven centuries. Its curation was Native-led and completely collaborative. Mia's associate curator of Native Art, Jill Ahlberg Yohe, and independent curator/Kiowa artist Teri Greeves worked closely with a 21-member Native Art Advisory Board to select pieces for display. The same team identified three themes explored in the show: legacy, power and relationships.
While the show is premised on the idea of bringing visibility to Native women's artworks, the very idea of a Native women's exhibition in an art museum, a symbol of colonialism, is in and of itself radical. Even the idea of being an "artist" is outside of Native cultures, in which women carry on traditions of making objects that are both aesthetic and utilitarian, and that hold a spiritual space allowing for an ongoing connection with ancestors.
Making what is now called "art" is "really our identities as Native people," Greeves said in opening-day remarks. "We are very grateful that [our work] has arrived in a fine art museum to be recognized in this manner by your paradigm," she said. "The exhibition in this sense recognizes how Native women are a part of the entirety of American art history."
Pairing the past and present
One of the show's strongest aspects is how it pairs contemporary artists alongside past makers. This brings out both the cultural importance of Native women being the ones who pass on the knowledge of making, and the ways that women's ancestors are always present, whether they are living or deceased.
In acknowledgment of a painful history, medicine stations are set up throughout the exhibit to allow Native visitors to hold medicine or offer prayers with tobacco as a way to work through and continue healing from trauma.
Collaboration is another powerful component on display. "Give Away Horses" (2006), by the mother-daughter-granddaughter cohort known as Growing Thunder, is more than an intricately beaded full-length Dakota/Nakoda woman's outfit — it is also a fully-alive creation to be worn and used, not to be stored away as a historical artifact.