A prestigious public art project meant for a downtown Minneapolis park is in limbo after the artist chosen for the job resigned amid accusations of cultural appropriation.
The situation echoes many instances of Native-presenting people called out to prove their identities across Indian Country, raising questions about belonging — who is permitted to practice Native arts and who gets to decide.
Inkpa Mani, a 25-year-old Dakota-speaking artist who lives in Wheaton, Minn., was selected in March by an independent panel of community members to create a stone sculpture overlooking St. Anthony Falls. Opened in 2021, the Water Works park area is sacred to the Dakota, who call it Owámniyomni.
Mani submitted concept designs for a series of approximately 40-feet-tall, forked pillars made of black granite and limestone. The "Y" shape references Bdote, the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers, he said.
But in July, the artist resigned. The city has not widely announced his departure nor what it means for the Water Works art project.
The Documenters, a citizen journalism outlet, first reported that the Mnisota Native Artists Alliance and Minnesota Indigenous Business Alliance had complained about the project.
The crux of their opposition to Mani: Though he was adopted by a Dakota family, he is not Dakota by blood.
According to a joint statement by the organizations, many Native artists expressed concerns about Mani's validity and the "lack of authentic Dakota representation" in the project, but they were ignored by the city.