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Photo: The Virtual Stage |
Who doesn't love zombies,
right? They're everywhere these
days. Television fans are sitting on
gravestones and pitchforks waiting for the new season of TMC's Walking Dead, which premieres October
14. In Vancouver, British Columbia,
The Virtual Stage, brings The Zombie Syndrome to town October 13-31. This production takes audience members on a
scavenger hunt from a starting location in downtown Vancouver.
The catch? They won't know where
until the day before when attendees will receive a phone call from a character
in the show telling them where to meet.
Using the GPS on their smartphones (Yes, phones are very much
encouraged!), audience groups advance the story by finding clues. Conceptually, this show is like a theatrical
"progressive dinner" without the food and with a little high-tech thrown in for good
measure. Zombies lurk around every corner. See it for only $25! For more
information visit www.facebook.com/TheVirtualStage or follow them on Twitter @TheVirtualStage.
This fall, the University
of Washington in Seattle is actually offering a course
entitled Zombies and Indians. The course is designed around the idea that
"zombies have existed at some level of reality for centuries," though they were popularized during the
Twentieth Century. The description goes on to add that they "have their
origins at the many points of collision between colonizer and
colonized..." and "have always walked the uncertain spaces between
binary 'certainties' such as us and them, rich and poor, slave and master, and,
of course, alive and dead." It
isn't hard then to see how this concept can be linked to Native Americans, and
their treatment in popular culture iconography.
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Photo: Ahalenia Studio/
Zombie Skins |
In fact, there is a generation of contemporary Native
American artists who are taking on these images, turning them around to make
them their own to elicit discussions of issues that affect Native
Americans. Much of this "repatriation"
is done in works that pay homage to the lowbrow movement of the late 1970s, or
what people have come to know as "pop surrealism." At first glance, many of these pieces seem
frivolous with their bright color palettes and familiar subject
matter plucked directly from popular culture.
While some pieces are meant to be tongue-in-cheek, according to
Swedish-Cherokee artist America Meredith, who easily maneuvers between
contemporary Native and lowbrow art, these works are intended to have a
broader, more biting message. "Even
though the imagery in our work might be silly; the messages are serious."
She went on to say that Native artists walk a fine line of
"respect and criticism" of the world.
"Many of the artists are also young parents, so they don't have the
luxury of nihilism. We hate society, but
we love our grandmothers.” Instead of
fitting the mainstream stereotype of artists as iconoclast, many of the artists
are dancers and are active in their own tribes’ ceremonies, and the art
reflects this respect for their tribes. But many things need to be torn down
and critiqued."
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Installation by Daniel McCoy in
Low-Rez at Eggman and Walrus Art Emporium
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Last month, when I was in Santa Fe for the 2012 SWAIA Indian Market, I
had the opportunity to check out some of this type of work in two exciting
shows. Low-Rez: Native American
Lowbrow Art was curated by Meredith and on view at Eggman and Walrus Art Emporium just off of the Santa
Fe Plaza. The work was thoughtful, colorful, well executed and garnered praise by Native American art heavy hitters. "The response
has been overwhelmingly fantastic. Luckily hosting the show during Market
enabled us to share our work with the widest possible audience of people in the
Native art world, including curators of major museums," Meredith explained.
While Low-Rez was the show that attracted everyone's
attention, quietly situated across town at Meredith's Ahalenia Studio I found
Zombie Skins: Salon de la Vie Morte, another group show featuring
many of the same artists from the Eggman and Walrus exhibtion, including Meredith, Monty Singer, Frank
Buffalo Hyde, Daniel McCoy, Mary Beth Nelson, Tom Farris, Chris Pappan, Melissa Melero, Ryan Singer,
and more. Meredith found herself coordinating
this show as well. I missed the opening
night party but had the opportunity to peruse the studio walls uninterrupted by other spectators in late afternoon just before the SWAIA
preview night. The art was high-quality, interesting, fun, and some pieces were even priced as little as $40!
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Zombies Skins at Ahalenia Studio
Photo: Paul Niemi |
Why a zombie show (besides the obvious reason that they are
cool!)? "Several artists at the
Heard Museum Guild Indian Fair and Market asked me if they could do a show at
my studio during Indian Market," Meredith said. Chris Pappan stepped up and helped hang the
show, along with his wife Debra Yepa-Pappan. Crews of volunteers made the show
happen — Natasha Wagner, Robert Garcia, Stephen MacMurray, Staci Golar, Melissa
Melero, Linda Eben Jones, Maggie Ohnesorgen, and others."
While Meredith insists that this type of work is not the
wave of the future for the Santa Fe Native American art scene, shows such as these are airing out some of the stuffiness that one oftentimes experiences in Santa Fe's cultural landscape. They give artists the
opportunity to create outside of the confines dictated by many traditional
galleries. With these shows, artists are free to set the rules and break
them--whatever they want to do.
"Dealers in Santa Fe have a great
deal of money and emotional investment in continuing on the exact same path
they have been on for decades," Meredith contends. I hope Meredith continues to produce and support more art events such as the ones I attended during Indian Market week.
"There’s a great deal of talk locally about demographic
shifts occurring among Santa Fe Indian art collectors. More and more, Native
people collect art, and the Baby Boomers and Gen-Xers are the collectors
now...I believe they want art they can personally relate to."
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Photo: Partial Self-Portrait by
Cannupa Hanska Luger |
Speaking of more shows of this genre, if you are traveling
through Oklahoma,
catch zombie madness with the debut of Zombie
Skins in Norman,
which opens tonight (Friday, September 14). Tom Farris of Bigfoot Creative has
brought a handful of the artists and their work from the Santa
Fe show and others to Norman.
The exhibition will kick off with an artist reception and Night of the Living Dead Live Paint
at 7
p.m. as part of Norman's
2nd Friday Art Walk. The show features the work of Bryon Archuleta(Ohkay
Owingeh), Lara Evans (Cherokee Nation), Tom Farris (Otoe-Missouria-Cherokee),
Robert Garcia (Mestizo), April Holder (Sac
and Fox-Wichita-Tonkawa), Topaz Jones
(Shoshone-Lummi-Kalapuya-Molalla), Daniel McCoy, Jr. (Potawatomi-Muscogee
Creek), Cannupa Hanska Luger (Mandan-Arikara-Hidatsa),America
Meredith (Cherokee Nation), Joseph Sanchez (Mestizo),Hoka
Skenandore (LuiseƱo-Oneida-Oglala Lakota), and Micah Wesley (Kiowa-Muscogee
Creek).
Zombie Skins runs
through October 8 at Bigfoot Creative 315 E.
Main Street in Norman,
Oklahoma.
Bigfoot Creative is open Monday through Saturday, 9:00am to 5:00pm, for more
information call (405) 420-0119 or visit their web site at www.bigfootcreative.net.
Watch an interview with Otoe-Missouria-Cherokee artist Tom Farris at 2012 SWAIA Indian Market
HERE.