O’nigöëi:yo:h Thinking In Indian Exhibit (July 14 – October 2, 2022)

O’nigöëi:yo:h Thinking In Indian Exhibit (July 14 – October 2, 2022)

An exhibition of Hodinöhsö:ni’ artists celebrating 2022 as the 50th year of Indigenous Studies at the University at Buffalo.
Credit: 
UB Art Galleries, Margaret Jacobs, Mishuana Goeman, Jolene Rickard, Laticia McNaughton, Gwendolyn Saul, Theresa McCarthy,

At a time when the field of Native American and Indigenous Studies and Indigenous activism has blossomed, we look back and forward to the seeding of intellectual traditions, seizing of territorial imaginings through meaningful actions, and the threading of our grounded relationality as we come together with a good mind. Works by over 30 artists from the Hodinöhsö:ni’ Confederacy – Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora – will be featured across the University at Buffalo in UB Art Galleries spaces. Visions of our artists will interconnect ideas through their imagery and highlighting of collective goals across generations and nations. The exhibition will include works created from a wide range of media – digital data, black ash, moose hair, glass beads, paint, and more. Each artwork is a demonstration of intergenerational knowledge with a 21st-century perspective.

The title of the exhibition is inspired by one of the founders of Native American Studies at the University at Buffalo, Dr. John Mohawk “Sotsisowah” (Seneca). Thinking in Indian A John Mohawk Reader is an Indigenous analysis of modern existence touching upon issues ranging from sovereignty to the coalescence of human wisdom. O’nigöëi:yo:h Thinking in Indian presents a multi-generational perspective, centering the artist’s voices around questions of land and gender, visual language and action, and imagining Hodinöhsö:ni’ futures.

O’nigöëi:yo:h Thinking in Indian speaks of Hodinöhsö:ni’ foundations of seeding, seizing territorial imaginings, and threading our relationships between the human and non-human in the first person with the intention to provoke and inspire as it reframes present discourses.

This exhibition is organized by UB Art Galleries with Margaret Jacobs (Akwesasne Mohawk), curatorial consultant, and guided by an advisory committee comprised of Dr. Mishuana Goeman (Tonawanda Band of Seneca), Professor of Gender Studies and American Indian Studies Interdepartmental Program, UCLA; Dr. Jolene Rickard (Tuscarora), Professor of the History of Art and Visual Studies and former Director of the American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program at Cornell University; Laticia McNaughton (Mohawk), Ph.D. candidate in American Studies at the University at Buffalo; and Dr. Gwendolyn Saul, Curator of Ethnography at the New York State Museum. Special thanks to Dr. Theresa McCarthy (Onondaga) Interim Chair and Associate Professor in Indigenous Studies and Associate Dean for Inclusive Excellence at the University of Buffalo.

Support for the exhibition is provided in part by the Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts with additional support provided by the UB Department of Indigenous Studies. Support for UB Art Galleries is provided by the UB College of Arts and Sciences, the Visual Arts Building Fund, the UB Anderson Gallery Fund, and the Seymour H. Knox Foundation Fine Art Fund.

Thinking-in-Indian-Exhibit-Announcement-Poster.jpg

O'nigöëi:yo:h Thinking in Indian Exhibit Announcement Poster, 2022

 

Visit UB Art Galleries for additional images on O’nigöëi:yo:h Thinking in Indian exhibit.

Items in Collection: 
thinkinginindian122.jpg
Category
Material & Art
Summary
Digital print, seed beads, oak wood, velvet Prayer Kneeler: 33 x 31 x 23" inches Frame: 31 x 31 inches framed
Creator
Melanie Hope, Melanie Printup Hope
thinkinginindian130.jpg
Category
Material & Art
Summary
Mixed-media on found object, 49x37 inches
Creator
Jay Carrier
thinkinginindian153.jpg
Category
Material & Art
Summary
Cast iron stool, velvet, glass Czech beads, taxidermy fish eye 21 x 18 x 13 inches
Creator
Karen Ann Hoffman
thinkinginindian91.jpg
Category
Material & Art
Summary
Linocut, ink on paper, 18x12 inches
Creator
Katrina Brown Akootchook, Kat Brown Akootchook