グッゲンハイム美術館さんのインスタグラム写真 - (グッゲンハイム美術館Instagram)「“I use text a lot with my public art. It’s good as resistance to a political discourse of Native life issues. Text is good to articulate that; it gets into the psyche of the viewer quickly. They can’t quite look away or not internalize it.” —Artist and educator Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds (Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes), as told to @documentjournal. ⠀ Edgar Heap of Birds’ “Places of Healing” is a 48-print installation that lists Native names of traditional sacred places across the United States. One of the work’s prints, pictured above, is short-captioned as “NOAVOSE,” pronounced Nowahwus in Tsistsistas/Cheyenne, is named Mato Paha in Lakota/Sioux and known as “Bear Butte" in English, and is used for healing, visioning, and other ceremonial purposes by many Native Peoples. ⠀ The second program—"Reckoning!"—of the 2020 #SummerofKnow series, co-curated by @forfreedoms, Suzan Harjo, and Jodi Archambault, will take place August 27 at 2 pm. This program will address Indigenous Peoples’ rights and the intersections of cultural protection, restorative justice, and art by Indigenous Peoples. Panelists include writer and curator Suzan Shown Harjo (Cheyenne and Hodulgee Muscogee); artist and educator Edgar Heap of Birds (Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes); social entrepreneur and organizer Natalie Stites Means (Dakota/Lakota); and artist, curator, and publisher America Meredith (Cherokee Nation). The discussion will be moderated by Native Rights Specialist Jodi Archambault (Hunkpapa and Oglala Lakota). ⠀ Click the link in our bio for more information. __ #EdgarHeapofBirds #Guggenheim #MuseumFromHome」8月26日 1時08分 - guggenheim

グッゲンハイム美術館のインスタグラム(guggenheim) - 8月26日 01時08分


“I use text a lot with my public art. It’s good as resistance to a political discourse of Native life issues. Text is good to articulate that; it gets into the psyche of the viewer quickly. They can’t quite look away or not internalize it.” —Artist and educator Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds (Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes), as told to @documentjournal.

Edgar Heap of Birds’ “Places of Healing” is a 48-print installation that lists Native names of traditional sacred places across the United States. One of the work’s prints, pictured above, is short-captioned as “NOAVOSE,” pronounced Nowahwus in Tsistsistas/Cheyenne, is named Mato Paha in Lakota/Sioux and known as “Bear Butte" in English, and is used for healing, visioning, and other ceremonial purposes by many Native Peoples.

The second program—"Reckoning!"—of the 2020 #SummerofKnow series, co-curated by @forfreedoms, Suzan Harjo, and Jodi Archambault, will take place August 27 at 2 pm. This program will address Indigenous Peoples’ rights and the intersections of cultural protection, restorative justice, and art by Indigenous Peoples. Panelists include writer and curator Suzan Shown Harjo (Cheyenne and Hodulgee Muscogee); artist and educator Edgar Heap of Birds (Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes); social entrepreneur and organizer Natalie Stites Means (Dakota/Lakota); and artist, curator, and publisher America Meredith (Cherokee Nation). The discussion will be moderated by Native Rights Specialist Jodi Archambault (Hunkpapa and Oglala Lakota).

Click the link in our bio for more information.
__
#EdgarHeapofBirds #Guggenheim #MuseumFromHome


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