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American Indian Curatorial Practice
The American Indian Curatorial Practice symposium proceedings: "Visiting: Conversations on Curatorial Practice and Native North American Art [PDF]
http://www.edenfred.org/ [LINK]
AICP Press
Release [PDF]
American Indian Curatorial Practice: State of the
Field 2008
The Department of Art History, University of Wisconsin-Madison
September 25-27, 2008
Project Description
The American
Indian Curatorial Practice (AICP) symposium hosted by the University
of Wisconsin-Madison’s Department
of Art History explored the tension between the dynamic and emerging
field of indigenous arts and the lagging reception of this practice
by the American academy. The meeting took the form of a roundtable
discussion with UW Madison scholars engaging nationally-known artists
and curators in sustained dialogue. Our goal is to define the current
status of American Indian curatorial practice. The project was
funded under the Ford Foundation’s Indigenous Knowledge & Expressive
Culture Portfolio Advancing the Dialogue on Native American
Arts in Society.
Three decades
ago, museums - including museums of American Indian arts and
culture - experienced an ideological shift to a new inclusive
museology whereby the traditional subjects of inquiry demanded
to author their own representations. This “changing presentation
of the American Indian” has been well documented, both in
the popular press and in academic publications. Although the new
inclusive museology is now largely incorporated as a standard practice,
almost no consideration has been given to varying curatorial standards
informed by diverse cultural values. The production and consumption
of Native arts mean little if critical interpretations of the work
are unavailable or even censored by narrowly defined or inappropriate
criteria.
Intellectuals, curators and educators who theorize, interpret
and disseminate American Indian arts via collections management,
publications, exhibits, lectures and teaching are charged with
the impossible task of altering centuries-old misperceptions about
Native aesthetics. Not only are contemporary Native arts often
erroneously viewed as inauthentic, contemporary Indigenous curation
methods (such as mentorship and collaboration) have a tendency
to be diminished in mainstream professional settings where individualism
and authorship are highly valued. Consequently, aspiring Native
arts museum professionals have been denied key opportunities to
contribute to emerging scholarly debates on critical arts theory
.
Great cultural institutions, social movements and universities
have often emerged from close discussions between highly committed
professional peers, dedicated to causes of social justice and democracy.
The next thirty year cycle of Indigenous self-representations depends
on the collective identification of existing challenges to American
Indian arts curation and the development of a plan to address the
divides that marginalize the field. The AICP symposium provides
this crucial opportunity.
Logistics
The American
Indian Curatorial Practice initiative will identify key challenges
to self-representation, particularly the lack of professional
infrastructure. The scarcity of graduate training programs in
art history and museum studies, an absence from representation
in national arts organizations, and a virtual rejection from mainstream
contemporary arts publications are evidence of an enduring disjuncture
in interpretative arts practice. Native arts professionals can
effectively strategize new directions towards the inclusion of
American Indian arts in established major venues through interventions
such as the “State of the Field 2008” symposium. UW
Madison is ideally situated to serve as a site for these discussions
due to its high number of American Indian arts faculty, central
geographic location and demonstrated commitment to the advancement
of American Indian intellectualism.
The AICP symposium
incorporated the format of “idea clusters”:
groups of four to five participants who collectively work on a
joint inquiry addressing one of the following topics: 1) exhibits,
2) publications, 3) collections, 4) academic and professional training,
and 5) organizational representation. Idea clusters consist of
a senior curator, an emerging curator, a professional artist and
an administrator or faculty representative, thus modeling the core
values of mentorship and exchange characteristic of our field.
Each cluster will forward resolutions which: A) Define the existing
challenges in their area, and B) Propose specific interventions.
Participants were asked to respond to creative and generative examples
of practice from the field as discussion-starters. From these applied,
case-study example, broader trends were identified.
Ten regional
participants (drawn from UW Madison’s American
Indian Studies Program, the departments of Art and Art History
and the Visual Culture Center jointly with local colleges and universities)
engaged with ten national representatives in a two-day meeting.
Day one of the symposium was devoted to direct problem-solving
within these core discussion groups (“idea clusters”)
followed by a joint presentations of findings. Day two identified
emergent key themes with senior participants leading a guided discussion
geared specifically to the published outcomes of the dialogue.
Participants:
1) Brian Baker, Associate Professor Native American and Ethnic
Studies, California State University, Sacramento
2) Ned Blackhawk, Associate Professor of History, UW Madison
3) Andrea Brdek, Graduate student, Art Department, UW Madison
4) Jill Casid, Associate Professor of Art History, Director of
Visual Culture, UW Madison
5) Henry Drewal, Professor of Art History, UW Madison
6) Anna Funmaker, Director, Ho-Chunk Tribal Museum
7) Liz Hanssen, Managing Editor, Meridians Journal
8) Roberta Hill, Professor of English, UW Madison
9) John Hitchcock, Associate Professor of Art, UW Madison
10) Candice Hopkins, Director and Curator of Exhibitions, The
Western Front
11) Tom Jones, Assistant Professor of Art, UW Madison
12) Amy Lonetree, Assistant Professor of American Studies, University
of California, Santa Cruz
13) Truman Lowe, Professor of Art, UW Madison and
AICP Executive Committee member
14) Erica Lord, 2008 Dobkin Native American Artist Fellow, School
of Advanced Research
15) Danielle Majors, Graduate student, Art Department, UW Madison
and AICP Project Assistant (Associate Professor Herzing College)
16) Nancy Marie Mithlo, Assistant Professor of Art History and
American Indian Studies, UW Madison and AICP Project Director
17) Jo Ortel, Associate Professor of Art History, Beloit College
18) Patsy Phillips, Director, The Institute of American Indian
Arts Museum and AICP Executive Committee member
19) Ryan Rice, Director, Aboriginal Curatorial Collective
20) Jolene Rickard, Associate Professor, History of Art and Visual
Studies, Dept. of the History of Art, Cornell University
21) Dyani Reynolds-White Hawk, Graduate student, Art Department,
UW Madison
22) Joseph Sanchez, Curator, Institute of American Indian Arts
23) Theresa Schenck, Associate Professor of Life Sciences Communication/American
Indian Studies, UW Madison
24) Sarah Stolte, Graduate student,
Art History, UW Milwaukee |
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Symposium attendees at the Edenfed Home September 26, 2008

AICP participants, L to R: Anna Funmaker, Ho-Chunk
Tribal Museum, Tom Jones, Assistant Professor of Photography,
UW Madison, Patsy Phillips, Institute of
American Indian Arts Museum Director.

AICP participants, L to R: Erica Lord, 2008 Dobkin Native American Artist Fellow, School of Advanced Research, Truman Lowe, Professor, Art Department, UW Madison, Sarah Stolte, UW Milwaukee Art History graduate student, Danielle Majors, UW Madison Art Department graduate student and AICP Project Assistant, Roberta Hill, Professor, English Department, UW Madison.

Ryan Rice, Director, Aboriginal Curatorial Collective
L
to R: Jo Ortel, Associate Professor of Art History, Beloit College and
Theresa Schenck, Associate Professor of Life Sciences Communication/American
Indian Studies, UW Madison.

Candace Hopkins, Director and Curator of Exhibits, The Western Front

Patsy Phillips and Brian Baker, Associate Professor - in Native American and Ethnic Studies, Cal State University, Sacramento

L to R: John Hitchcock, Associate Professor Art Department, UW Madison, Amy Lonetree, Assistant Professor of American Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz, Erica Lord, 2008 Dobkin Native American Artist Fellow, School of Advanced Research

L to R: AICP Executive committee members Nancy
Marie Mithlo, Assistant Professor of Art History and American Indian
Studies, UW Madison with Truman Lowe, Professor, Art Department,
UW Madison

L to R: Ned Blackhawk, Associate Professor of History, UW Madison, Joseph Sanchez, Curator, Institute of American Indian Arts Museum, Patsy Phillips, Director, Institute of American Indian Arts Museum |
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