Indigenous Peoples’ Day recognizes Indigenous and Native people as the original inhabitants of the l
Indigenous Peoples’ Day recognizes Indigenous and Native people as the original inhabitants of the land now known as the United States and honors their continued resilience in the face of centuries of violence, displacement, and injustice. Onondaga-Micmac artist Gail E. Tremblay addresses both the domination and survivance of Native people through a blending of techniques and materials that juxtapose traditional and contemporary Native life. In When Ice Stretched on For Miles (2017), she applied traditional weaving techniques to construct a basket from the film of a 1967 ethnographic documentary in which a Netsilik Inuit family reenacted a historic way of life at the director’s request. The basket also calls attention to the devastating effects of climate change on the Arctic region and its severe threat to Indigenous ways of being. “Throughout the Americas,” Tremblay explains, “Native people are fighting to save the forests, plants, animals, and fish runs because they can’t forget the way of seeing the world that our ancestors passed down to us.” See this work and others in Climate in Crisis: Environmental Change in the Indigenous Americas, on view through June 2021. Gail E. Tremblay (Onondaga-Micmac, born 1945). When Ice Stretched on for Miles, 2017. 16mm film, white film leader, gold and silver braided plastic thread. Brooklyn Museum, H. Randolph Lever Fund, 2019.41a-b. © artist or artist’s estate -- source link
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