A week after "Bring Her Home 2020: Sacred Womxn of Resistance" opened at All My Relations Gallery in Minneapolis, a young Indigenous girl named Miikawaadizi went missing.
Coincidentally, the show — focusing on the epidemic of missing or murdered Indigenous women — includes a photo of the girl with a red handprint over her mouth, shot by her cousin Ne-Dah-Ness Greene.
"It was my fear realized," said Angela Two Stars, director of All My Relations. "It gets you in the heart, so we asked: What can we do to help?"
The gallery shared Miikawaadizi's disappearance on its social media; a few days later, Greene posted that the girl had been returned home unharmed.
Although Miikawaadizi's story had a positive ending, the broader statistics are dire.
American Indian women deal with murder rates 10 times the national average, and homicide is their third-leading cause of death. Minnesota has the ninth-highest rate of missing or murdered Indigenous women. In 2016, 5,712 such cases were reported nationally, according to a study by the Urban Indian Health Institute.
Minnesota's Legislature voted unanimously in 2019 to create a task force to address the issue. But as this exhibition demonstrates, it's just a beginning.
Greene is one of 14 Indigenous artists, including Minnesota-based Julie Buffalohead, Dyani White Hawk, Graci Horne, Loriene Pearson and Cole Redhorse Jacobson, included in the powerful exhibition.