SANTA FE — What does it imply to be a actual Indian artist who makes actual Indian artwork? And what occurs once they attempt to promote it?
James Luna (Payómkawichum, Ipai, and Mexican) approached the previous query in his 1991 set up titled “Take a Image with a Actual Indian.” The artist invited guests to take an image with him or with three cut-outs of his likeness: one donning conflict dance regalia, one other in a black t-shirt and slacks, and a 3rd in a leather-based loincloth and moccasins. Settler viewers could perceive just one layer of irony — the absurd concept that an “genuine” Native individual exists as an artifact to be placed on show. As they pat themselves on the again for being in on the joke, they replicate the identical mechanism the work exposes: gawking at a Native individual on show.
The latter query was on our minds over the weekend of August 17 on the Southwest Affiliation for Indian Arts’s (SWAIA) annual Indian Market in Santa Fe, New Mexico. SWAIA simply accomplished its 102nd version and is among the largest and oldest marketplaces for artwork in North America. The juried market began as a contest in 1922 and stays one right now. Former Government Director Kim Peone (Colville Confederated Tribes/Jap Band of Cherokee Indians) instructed Hyperallergic in 2022 that it was initially designed by settlers from an “anthropological perspective, pondering that they had been going to protect Indian arts as a result of we had been getting ready to extinction.”
Nonetheless, SWAIA, which is primarily led by Native ladies, has turn into a major financial pressure for Native artists and the state of New Mexico. Not dissimilar to different modern artwork gala’s akin to Artwork Basel Miami, the newest market featured round 1,000 collaborating artists from over 200 tribal nations within the US and Canada. Like New York throughout Armory Week in September, Santa Fe is reworked every August by a flood of out-of-towners: packed eating places, surge pricing on lodges, cellphone failures resulting from community pressure. Numerous auxiliary and unsanctioned artwork occasions happen throughout the weekend, as nicely, hoping to capitalize on a brief inflow of artwork patrons. The Pathways Indigenous Arts Competition is hosted by the Poeh Cultural Middle, owned by the Pueblo of Pojoaque, and the Free Indian Market operates simply north of the Santa Fe Plaza in Federal Park.
Not like mainstream gala’s, although, Indian Market weekend is targeted on the artists themselves. Every sales space at SWAIA, Pathways, and Free Indian Market is staffed by a Native artist and their pals, household, or assistants. The intimidation gross sales methods used to hawk modern artwork at blue-chip gala’s — stern gallery attendants, hidden costs, secret backrooms, and costly trendy furnishings — are absent in Santa Fe, changed by a few folding chairs and a desk in a small tent. The cultural influence of getting so many Native artists and artwork employees collectively for a couple of days is immeasurable.
Nevertheless, the staffing construction of the sales space, mixed with the lower cost factors and a major settler purchaser base, additionally presents the chance for a “Take a Image with a Actual Indian”-like interplay between the artist and purchaser. Some vacationers deal with these interactions as possibilities to discover the tradition of Native folks, and viewing artwork as secondary.
Over the course of the weekend, we witnessed ridiculously racist questions requested again and again; patrons touching artwork, artists, and fashions with out asking; and artists stripped of their singular id and set as much as carry out as a cultural consultant to make a sale. At instances, it felt like James Luna’s efficiency performed out in real-time with no self-awareness from settler artwork viewers. However on this case, the “actual Indian” artist (who should meet SWAIA’s requirements, which require individuals to be enrolled members of a federally acknowledged tribe or Alaska Native Company within the US or registered for “Indian standing” in Canada) is afforded far much less management than Luna as they attempt to make gross sales.
Contemplating the social dynamics at play, does the paintings accepted and bought at SWAIA pigeonhole Native artists? We observed that works that didn’t solely depict Native folks or tradition had been largely absent from the primary market, however had been obtainable on the market in offsite venues like galleries. The SWAIA financial system seems to be extremely depending on the settler gaze and settler definition of “Indian artwork.” Furthermore, with SWAIA working from a deep historical past of colonial entanglement, we surprise: Should artists behave in a sure approach or create so-called “genuine Indian artwork” with the intention to make gross sales there? If that’s the case, what’s “genuine” and what’s not? Who’s the decide?
Over the weekend, a settler artwork seller at a satellite tv for pc occasion confirmed us a portray by a recent Diné artist and warranted us that she was an “genuine Navajo artist.” (As a Diné lady, I, Sháńdíín, laughed. Who made him the decide of what an genuine Navajo artist is?) The remark, whereas jarring, is a part of a broader development of promoting the mythology of genuine Native artwork all through town and throughout venues throughout SWAIA, from competitors classes and sellers promoting million-dollar secondary market works to vacationer retailers promoting souvenirs like dreamcatchers. Within the course of, Native artists’ particular person autonomy and authorship are pushed apart. Regardless of its position as a hub for Native artists, SWAIA hasn’t solely moved previous its origins in White settler obsession with Native authenticity. We witnessed colonial nostalgia in full swing — settlers’ refusal to deal with the violent historical past and ongoing presence of colonialism, however on the similar time coveting “genuine” Indian artwork. SWAIA acquired backlash from artists and neighborhood members final yr after accepting a $30,000 donation from ExxonMobil, whose practices exacerbate useful resource extraction on tribal lands and threaten Native sovereignty. What’s a Native artist to do amid this webbed dynamic, particularly once they have payments to pay?
Each exhibitor who makes it to SWAIA has immense expertise and plenty of share generational data alongside works on the market. Nonetheless, it may be troublesome to acknowledge this expertise when it’s overshadowed by a settler collector mentality and format that encourages the show of colonial fantasies of genuine Native tradition alongside the paintings. Exhibitors who use trendy know-how, from a chainsaw to a digital artwork app, are prone to obtain some variation of a snide remark from the patrons and sales space guests about how this isn’t what “genuine Indians would have carried out” or “your ancestors didn’t have this device.” Some reply that their grandfather gave them the chainsaw or their dad taught them Adobe Illustrator, however others maintain again the attention roll and try to maneuver on with their enterprise. Interactions like these are magnified at Indian Market, however the fact is that they occur to Native folks in on a regular basis life. As with Luna’s “Take a Image with a Actual Indian” three many years in the past, the variety of Native artwork is frequently hemmed in by settler expectations of what and who Native folks ought to be.
However artists can be artists. They are going to shatter settler fantasies of authenticity and work free from identity-based tropes, fueling the novel impulses that push via the seams every time creativity is constrained. And the artists exhibiting work throughout Santa Fe Indian Market had been no exception. The Institute of American Indian Arts’s Museum of Up to date Native Artwork offered two exhibits drawing parallels between Indigenous artists, a few of whom don’t meet the necessities of entry into Indian Market.
At their SWAIA cubicles, artists Kevin Aspaas (Diné), Hollis Chitto (Mississippi Choctaw/Laguna and Isleta Pubelos), Summer time Peters Yahbay (Sagniaw Ojibwe), and Kiera Pyke (Mohawk) offered invigorating weaving, beadwork, and quillwork. The official style programming targeted on design and Indigenous futurism, fairly than being organized based mostly on classes and classifications. Experimental designs spearheaded by Adrian Standing-Elk Pinnecoose (Diné/Southern Ute), Caroline Monnet (Anishinaabe/French), and Jontay Kham (Plains Cree) had been highlights on the runway present. Pathways was, refreshingly, geared towards a Native purchaser base. We additionally loved the Damaged Packing containers offsite performances by Raven Chacon (Diné), Laura Ortman (White Mountain Apache), and rock duo Deerlady, who all performed to audiences of Native artists, curators, neighborhood members, and humanities employees. Close by, gallery exhibits and installations of labor by Chaz John (Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska/Mississippi Band Choctaw), Haley Greenfeather English (Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians/European/Irish), and Michael Namingha (Tewa/Hopi) had been a testomony to the worth of artists sustaining artistic management and increasing past the SWAIA market construction.
Notably, each Greenfeather’s late father, Sam English (Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa), and Namingha’s father, Dan Namingha (Tewa/Hopi), have left a mark on SWAIA as extremely regarded artists, proof of the way in which its construction permits future generations to interrupt away from what could also be seen as typical “genuine” market artwork — and to construct neighborhood yr after yr. The conversations between Native of us at Airbnbs, establishing cubicles, getting espresso, or having a drink have carried out extra to safe an Indigenous future than any buy by a settler collector.
So, what occurs when a actual Indian artist tries to promote their actual Indian artwork? Santa Fe Indian Market, in all its strengths and contradictions, reminds us of the breadth of solutions to that query. Making work solely with out settler financial stress is virtually not possible, however we hope that the out of date metric of “authenticity” can be shedded to make room for the huge spectrum of Native creativity. We are able to champion Native artists with out having to outline Native artwork.
Editor’s Be aware: Throughout SWAIA, Zach Feuer labored on the curatorial group of the Gochman Household Assortment, which acquired work by Haley Greenfeather English on the market, commissioned one work exhibited by Marilou Schultz, and owns one version of images documenting James Luna’s “Take a Image with a Actual Indian.” Sháńdíín Brown served as one among 4 judges of the beadwork and quillwork classification and assisted the Gochman Household Assortment curatorial group for 2 days of the market.