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Cover image for Unsettling Native art histories on the Northwest coast
Title:
Unsettling Native art histories on the Northwest coast
JLCTITLE245:
edited by Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse, Aldona Jonaitis.
Publication Information:
Seattle : Bill Holm Center for the Study of Northwest Native Art, Burke Museum, in association with University of Washington Press, [2020]
Physical Description:
334 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 27 cm.
ISBN:
9780295747132

9780295750705
Abstract:
"This edited collection focuses on "unsettling" Northwest Coast art studies, bringing forward voices that uphold Indigenous priorities, engage with past and ongoing effects of settler colonialism, and advocate for practices for more accountable scholarship. Featuring authors with a variety of perspectives, backgrounds, and methodologies, Unsettling Art Histories offers new insights for the field of Northwest Coast art studies. Key themes include discussions of cultural heritage protections and long-standing defenses of natural resources and territory; re-centering women and the critical role they play in transmitting cultural knowledge across generations through materials, techniques, and creations; reflecting on the decolonization work being undertaken in museums; and examining how artworks function beyond previous scholarly framings as living documents carrying information critical to today's inquiries. Re-examining previous scholarship and questioning current institutional practices by prioritizing information gathered in Native communities, the essays in this volume exemplify various methods of "unsettling" and demonstrate how new methods of research have reshaped scholarship and museum practices."-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography Note:
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents:
Introduction / Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse. -- Part I. Cultural heritage protection : questions of rights and authority: A bear in the cedar / Duane Niatum -- Chapter 1. The Seward Shame Pole : a Tlingit countermonument to the Alaska Purchase / Emily L. Moore -- Chapter 2. The social life of stones : Haida hlgas7agaa/argillite and the making of inalienable commodities / Kaitline McCormick -- Chapter 3. Morse code for creation : Jim Schoppert's painterly language for a postmodern survival / Christopher Green -- Chapter 4. From "artifakes" to "surrogates" : the replication of Northwest Coast carving by non-natives / Janet Catherine Berlo and Aldona Jonaitis. -- Part II. Women's work : stories, art, and power: One square inch / Lily Hope -- Chapter 5. Stl'inll ~ those with clever hands : presenting female indigenous art and scholarship / Jisgang Nika Collison -- Chapter 6. Copper seaweed and woven octopus bags : Shgen George and the art of resilience / Megan A. Smetzer -- Chapter 7. Ellen Neel and carving on the coast : three decades of change and renewal / Lou-ann Ika'wega Neel. --

Part III. Changing museums: Let Indigenous reign / Ishmael Hope -- Chapter 8. In the spirit of reconciliation : rethinking collections and the act of engagement at the Museum of Vancouver / Sharon Fortney -- Chapter 9. The museum disappeared : Northwest Coast art and the object of display / Karen Duffek, Peter Morin, and Karen Benbassat Ali -- Chapter 10. From behind-the-scenes to the front of the house : Here & Now : Native Artists Inspired at the Burke Museum / Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse -- Chapter 11. Woosh.Jee.Een, pulling together : repatriation's healing tide / Lucy Fowler Williams, with contributions by Robert Starbard. -- Part IV. Beyond art: Thoughts on formline / Iljuuwaas Tyson Brown -- Chapter 12. Soft robes of thundering power : mountain goat fiber textiles of the Northwest Coast / Evelyn Vanderhoop -- Chapter 13, Sayach'apis and the Naani (Grizzly Bear) Crest / Denise Nicole Green -- Chapter 14. Tlingit art / Ismael Hope. -- Conclusion: Fifty years studying Northwest Coast art : a personal view / Aldona Jonaitis -- Contributirs -- Index.
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