'Walk in Beauty' showcases American Indian art
A new exhibition of works by American Indian artists juxtaposes traditional motifs and contemporary concerns, and highlights the familial connections between generations of artists.
"Walk in Beauty: Discovering American Indian Art," on display at the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art through July 8, features more than 40 paintings, works on paper and sculptures dating from 1929 to 2001, all drawn from the collection of Malcolm Whyte '55 and Karen Whyte. Artists from across North America are represented, with most coming from Hopi, Navajo, Cochiti, Taos and other Southwestern tribal heritages.
Taking its title from a traditional Navajo prayer, the exhibition illustrates the spread of "traditional style" American Indian painting in the 1920s and 1930s by artists trained in Dorothy Dunn's studio at the American Indian School in Santa Fe, N.M. These works depict hunting scenes and other aspects of Indian ritual and tradition, and draw on stylistic motifs reproduced for centuries on textiles and pottery.
Several works by contemporary American Indian artists also reference traditional themes, but treat them in new ways and use new media. Such artists as Harry Fonseca and David Bradley use humor and satire to comment on Indians' place in society and to make important revisions to American history. In many cases, this new generation of artists has familial ties to older practitioners, and the exhibition underscores this artistic inheritance by pairing works by mother and daughter, father and son, uncle and nephew.
The museum will present two programs in conjunction with the exhibit:
For more information, call 607 255-6464 or visit http://www.museum.cornell.edu.
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