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Native modernism

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Thursday, Jan. 8, 2015 9:59 PM
Aidan Ashley, a Crow Creek Sioux, stands at his mural depicting the Wounded Knee massacre that took place on Dec. 29, 1890. It is part of a special exhibit now showing at the Anasazi Heritage Center.
Native American artist Veneron Yazzen, left, poses with one of his creations at the Anasazi Heritage Center. Miss Navajo Nation, McKeon Dempsey, and artist Koty Jim join in.

For muralist Aidan Ashley, the massacre at Wounded Knee on the Lakota Reservation is misrepresented in history.

His striking four-panel mural displayed at the Anasazi Heritage Center tries to set the record straight on that day, Dec. 29, 1890.

“I show it as a battle, not a massacre,” he said during an art opening. “The 7th Calvary wanted to make a crisis because a gun accidentally went off.”

U.S. military and native warriors are shown in the heat of battle with equal standing. Animals sacred to Native Americans look on.

“The Calvary overacted, and the men women and children fought back against surrender,” Ashley explained. “The piece breaks down the myth that they ran away all while getting gunned down.”

Ashley’s work is one of many at a new exhibit called “Ancestral Homelands: Connections to Land, Space, and Time.”

The artwork was created by students and staff from the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, N.M.

“The pieces are for sale at seedling prices,” said Therese Lynston, guest curator. “These artists are at the beginning of their careers.”

Art is a good outlet for Native American youth, said McKean Dempsey, Miss Navajo Nation, and it needs more support.

“IAIA opened doors for me, the artwork gives us power and a voice. It helps define who we are,” she said.

Navajo artist Veneron Yazzen, 29, deploys abstract realism to show the mythology and humanism of native cultures.

“When I begin an art piece, I embrace the present, the daily life behind cultures,” Yazzen said. “Then from realism I jump to mythology to give it a feeling of enrichment.”

Contemporary paintings, sculptures, ceramics, and jewelry are featured at the special exhibit. The theme is how contemporary Native art is influenced by cultural ancestors and traditions.

The free exhibit is especially poignant because the area is the actual ancestral homeland for Southwest tribes.

“We are really honored to host this exhibit,” said Bridget Ambler, supervisory curator for the Anasazi Heritage Center. “The Institute has produced some of our nation’s most well known artists.”

The original exhibit is a chance for students to curate, and provides an opportunity for the public to view modern Native American art.

“We have a tendency to think of native arts as something stuck in the past,” Ambler said. “This show debunks that stereotype. The artwork is very fabulous, refreshing and unexpected.”

jmimiaga@cortezjournal.com

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