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“Rendezvoused”
Nancy Marie Mithlo, Curator
The exhibit “Rendezvoused” will open at La Biennale di Venezia 53rd international arts exhibition in collaboration with the Department of European and Postcolonial Studies, University of Ca' Foscari, Venice on June 5, 2009. “Rendezvoused” is curated by University of Wisconsin-Madison Assistant Professor of Art History Nancy Marie Mithlo and features the work of photographer Tom Jones and painter Andrea Carlson. Mithlo has a record of producing innovative Native arts exhibits in Venice (1999, 2001, 2003 and 2007: utilizing culturally-informed curatorial practices.
The exhibit “Rendezvoused” concerns the transfer
of cultural capital and questions the significance of restoration
from varied perspectives. The original term rendezvous references
the historic experience of fur traders and buck skinners of the
American colonial period 1640 to 1840. Today rendezvous describes
a contemporary movement in which living history re-enactors gather
to camp outdoors and role play as historical personas , dressed
in primitive clothing and using re-created props and shelters of
period settings. An emphasis on what is perceived as accuracy in
material culture permeates these gatherings, but there is also
present a spirit of communalism and a desire to return to romanticized
social values of trust, resiliency, skill and sharing. Today’s
rendezvous participants engage in a fantasy interpretation of lifestyles
and characteristics in which American Indians are often romantically
portrayed by non-Indians. Our exhibit proposal positions the Native
artists and curators of IA3 as observers and commentators on invented
histories. Rather than staging a reactive negative commentary about
false identities, “Rendezvoused” seeks to understand
the deeper significance of “render” in which restitution
and surrender permeate our enactments of imaginary selves.
Jones, a Ho-Chunk Native, photographed the rendezvous phenomenon
in Wisconsin, Illinois and Indiana over the past year for this
series. His carefully staged portraits of rendezvous participants
are imbued with a sense of noble sincerity and worth. A slightly
over-weight man dressed as a Chippewa Indian dog-soldier sports
a red-painted face, traditional roach headdress and calico trade
shirt. His pioneer wife sits demurely beside him looking into the
distance with their wigwam lodge forming a peaceful background.
Yet beneath the man’s authentic leather moccasin, a dusty
plastic bag stubbornly betrays the modernity of their world. Jones
does not seek to embarrass but to expose this classless constructed
utopia where mechanics, lawyers or office-workers regard each other
as fictive kin. Careful attention is paid to the nature of posturing.
Given the basis of constructed truths that rendezvous participants
draw from (Hobbyist books, old Western films, Curtis photographs),
we are able to see how they see us. If the rendezvous movement
operates on the notion of contrast (“I am not an office secretary,
but a Métis woman of the 1840s”), then what space
can Native Americans themselves occupy today?
Similarly, Carlson’s paintings and drawings take as their
subject matter the exchange of goods, ideas and body fluids inherent
in the fur trade area of northern Minnesota (See: http://mikinaak.com).
An Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) woman of mixed European ancestry, Carlson
depicts origin stories in which the Windigo, (often translated
as "winter cannibal monster") misidentifies those it
consumes. The concept of consumption is central to her description
of trade and reciprocation between different cultures. Carlson’s
intense juxtapositions of European trade goods such as teapots
with mythical animal beings wearing energies as black-and-white
patterned blankets confront the viewer with an assault of images
and meanings that are not easily resolved. She states, “I
am interested in cultural territories, where distinctions become
blurred and perceptions of authenticity are bought into question.” The
nature of reality is debated in both artists’ fascination
with cultural inventions that juxtapose what is perceived as traditional
with the modern. Yet, rather than forming a seamless happy hybridity
of influences, these artists seem to suggest that boundaries are
necessary to the human condition and are often best expressed in
fantasy settings where we inversely expose ourselves by being what
we are not, therefore consuming and ultimately destroying the objects
of our desire.
Organizational Background
In the year 2007, remarkably, a Native American art presence
is a standard feature of the Venice Biennale. The chronology runs
from 1995 when Edward Poitras represented the Canadian pavilion
with Gerald McMaster curating, to 1997 as Brenda Croft, Hetti Perkins
and Victoria Lynn co-curated artists Emily Kame Kngwarreye, Yvonne
Koolmatrie, and Judy Watson at the Australian pavilion. The year
1999 marked the first exhibit sponsored by the Native American
Arts Alliance (later named the Indigenous Arts Action Alliance,
IA3) with artists Harry Fonseca, Bob Haozous, Jaune Quick-to-See
Smith, Kay WalkingStick, Frank LaPena, Richard Ray Whitman and
poet Simon Ortiz participating. In 2001, IA3 returned with Bob
Haozous, Gabe Shaw, Richard Ray Whitman and poet Sherwin Bitsui.
In 2003, the IA3 featured the work of Shelley Niro and Sherwin
Bitsui at the University of Venice with the Smithsonian National
Museum of the American Indian (NMAI) hosting the opening events.
The year 2005, the NMAI exhibited the work of James Luna with no
IA3 participation. In 2007, the Canadian-based arts collective
The Requickening Project in collaboration with IA3, exhibited Lori
Blondeau and Shelley Niro at the University of Venice with Mithlo
and Ryan Rice as co-curators and Elisabetta Frasca directing. Thus
the IA3 collective, inspired by our indigenous colleagues in 1995
and 1997, pioneered the first solely American indigenous representation
at the Venice Biennale in 1999, co-sponsored and then lent the
exhibit to the Smithsonian, with the Smithsonian Institution ultimately
gaining official Biennale recognition alone by 2007 (at which time
a hefty $30,000 Biennale fee was instituted).
Our exhibition in Venice means much more than simply garnering
the prestige of inclusion. IA3 aims to build upon our long-term
and meaningful collaboration with intellectuals and artists in
Venice that support our overall aims of cultural inquiry, sovereignty
and intercultural exchange. Exhibition in Venice transforms artists
who are enabled to interact among their peers internationally.
The Biennale as perceived by IA3 in our first 1999 exhibit represented
the primary site of a global arts stage. This non-profit organization
petitioned and was accepted by the Venice Biennale offices as a
sovereign nation for the exhibition “Ceremonial” at
San Stae in 1999, marking the first contemporary Native American
arts exhibition in the Biennale’s hundred year history curated
and sponsored by a Native American group. Originating in the Indian
arts market-saturated region of Santa Fe, New Mexico, our art collective
seeks as its mission “to allow Native artists the opportunity
to present their work on an international stage outside of market
constraints.” We anticipate that our 2009 presentation “Rendezvoused” will
fully enhance the curatorial efforts of Daniel Birnbaum, director
of the 53rd International Art Exhibition.
Biographies
Tom Jones is an Assistant Professor of Photography at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison. He received his MFA in Photography and a
MA in Museum Studies from Columbia College in Chicago, IL. He was
the curator for the show “Dressing Up” for the Museum
of Contemporary Photography in Chicago, Illinois and the traveling
show America First People, New People, Forgotten People. He is
currently collaborating on a future show of Horace Poolaw’s
photographs with Dr. Nancy Mithlo. Jones is the collections of
the National Museum of the American Indian, Polaroid Corporation,
Sprint Corporation, The Chazen Museum of Art, The Nerman Museum,
The Museum of Contemporary Photography, and Michigan State University
Museum.
Born in 1979, Andrea Carlson grew up in Minnesota, and is an
MFA graduate of Minneapolis College of Art and Design. She has
been the recipient of a McKnight Foundation Fellowship (2007-2008),
a Blacklock Nature Sanctuary Fellowship (2007), and a Minnesota
State Arts Board, Cultural Community Partnership Grant, in collaboration
with the Soo Visual Arts Center (2005). Carlson was awarded Best
in Show, Ojibwe Art Exhibition at Leach Lake Tribal College, Bemidji,
MN (2004), and has been widely reviewed. She lectures regularly
at the University of Minnesota. In 2008, Carlson was invited to
present her work at the Smithsonian National Museum of the American
Indian in a yet to be named exhibition.
Tom Jones
Andrea
Carlson
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| Indiana Rendezvoused by Tom Jones 2008
“Buffalo Heads” From
the series Wisconsin People on the Land by Tom Jones
Tom
Jones 2008
The Other Side by Andrea Carlson , 2007, 24 x 36 inches, oil, acrylic, ink, color pencil and graphite on paper.
Andrea Carlson, Aadizookaanag (Spirits), 2006,36 x 48 inches, oil on canvas
Andrea Carlson
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