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ARLIS/NA 29th Annual Conference
| Session 10: Contemporary Native American Art: Challenges for Artists, Curators, Scholars, Librarians and Educators | |
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Abstract: My Quest for Identity as Artist, Scholar, Librarian, and Native Developing a meaningful identity is a long process for everyone.
It includes a realistic perception and an evaluation of one's journey
through life. This quest involves a constant renewal
of the mind, an alertness to the spirit, and a willingness to choose paths
to follow. A search for identity is a continual listening to the heart. This listening process is set apart by
an openness to our experiences and inner reflections. By remaining attentive, we can choose to become active participants
in the dance and not just passive observers in our world. As an American Indian woman seeking to
learn more about my Ojibwe heritage and its effects upon this journey,
my search includes many dimensions. In this presentation, my process of defining
multiple roles as an artist, scholar, and librarian will be shared. The Role of the Native Artist in the 21st Century, Paul Apodaca The role of American Indian artists in contemporary society is complex. Articulating an Indigenous Aesthetic: Challenges from Indian Art
Education and Contemporary Native Art Curation, Nancy Mithlo Growth
and the Creative Process: 43 Years of Work, Harry Fonseca
The connections made in my work are not exclusively cultural. Myth and history comprise the thematic
elements of my art. My paintings
incorporate simple forms, basic color and design, and abstract landscape. Ancient symbols are rendered as contemporary
and relevant without losing the past. In a passionate confrontation with this subject matter, images
unfold and hint at the creative process itself. Mythology, transformed
into a sense of myth, reveals its drama, its magic, its presence and life. As an artist with 43 years of work, my art continues to grow and
change. This growth and its
process reveals the many cultures and the universal artistic exploration
of passion, struggle and fight, and its subsequent transformation into
art.
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| last revised 3.16.01 |