Shapeshifting : transformations in Native American art
Karen Kramer, Janet Catherine Berlo, Bruce Bernstein, Joseph D. Horse Capture, Jessica L. Horton, Paul Chaat Smith, Kathleen E. Ash-Milby (Contributor), Karah English (Contributor), Aldona Jonaitis (Contributor), Madeleine M. Kropa (Contributor), Ryan Rice (Contributor), Peabody Essex Museum
Public perception of Native American art and culture has often been derived from misunderstandings and misinterpretations, and from images promulgated by popular culture. Typically, Native Americans are grouped as a whole and their art and culture considered part of the past rather than widely present. This work challenges these assumptions by focusing on the objects as art rather than cultural or anthropological artifacts and on the multivalent creativity of Native American artists. The approach highlights the inventive contemporaneity that existed in all periods and continues today. More than 75 works in a wide range of media and scale are organized into four thematic groups: changing, expanding the imagination; knowing, expressing worldview; locating, exploring identity and place; and voicing, engaging the individual. The result is a paradigm shift in understanding Native American art
Print Book, English, 2012
Peabody Essex Museum ; Yale University Press, Salem, Mass., New Haven, Conn., 2012