ICA Boston's "An Indigenous Present" Show Pushes Boundaries of Native Art and Abstraction
The show features the work of 15 abstract Native artists, marking a departure from traditional representations in the art world. The title, borrowed from Gibson’s book, references Indigenous gift economies and highlights gaps in Native art resources.
Abstract abstraction becomes experience for Native people living intermundane lives—between Native America and the United States, elevating it beyond style to mode of experience. Gibson's curation untangles artists from "fine art" rhetoric, bringing together diverse culture bearers who share space within Indigenous contexts but rarely unite in Western institutions.
Visual artists Cara Romero creates campy photography, James Luna molds sculptural lampoons, and Wendy Red Star arranges sarcastic tableaus. The show translates approach across nine rooms, with each of the fifteen artists represented multiple times.
The 2023 publication date may explain the absence of local artists, highlighting the overrepresentation of Southwestern and Plains aesthetics in contemporary Native art pedagogy at non-Native university art departments.
Sonya Kelliher-Combs' "Salmon Curl" (2023) exemplifies violent beauty of life’s cycles across species. Mary Sully's portraits of white celebrities reimagining fame through a Dakota aesthetic lens lampoon the culture that excluded her.
The exhibition translates approach across nine rooms, with each of the fifteen artists represented multiple times. Teasing the show's primary theme, "Man-made Land" (2025), commissioned from Caroline Monnet, is installed diagonally in ICA’s slanted foyer wall as a unique, though ancillary, exhibition.
Raven Chacon's installation "Controlled Burn" (2025) hums like a distant engine, marking what cannot be entered. Kimowan Metchewais' work fuses landscape photography with the blanket's horizontal stripes rendered here in ruddy hues like dried blood. Jaune Quick-to-See Smith's works extend this thread employing canvas as a rich stand-in for the animal hides used to construct Plains tipis.
Humor permeates throughout, from caption to composition in Anna Tsouhlarakis’s "IF SHE WAS AT THE PARTY, SHE WOULD HAVE DUMPED MORE THAN TEA" (2025), signaling unsustainability and whitewashing of U.S. life and history.
The show pushes boundaries, delivering disquietude for settlers, delight and laughter for Native attendees opening weekend. It delivers something beyond representationalism—evolving toward resistance and circumnavigation of the colonial gaze.
ICA Boston's "An Indigenous Present" Show Transcends Borders of Art and Culture
The show features the work of 15 abstract Native artists, marking a departure from traditional representations in the art world. The title, borrowed from Gibson’s book, references Indigenous gift economies and highlights gaps in Native art resources.
Abstract abstraction becomes experience for Native people living intermundane lives—between Native America and the United States, elevating it beyond style to mode of experience. Gibson's curation untangles artists from "fine art" rhetoric, bringing together diverse culture bearers who share space within Indigenous contexts but rarely unite in Western institutions.
Visual artists Cara Romero creates campy photography, James Luna molds sculptural lampoons, and Wendy Red Star arranges sarcastic tableaus. The show translates approach across nine rooms, with each of the fifteen artists represented multiple times.
The 2023 publication date may explain the absence of local artists, highlighting the overrepresentation of Southwestern and Plains aesthetics in contemporary Native art pedagogy at non-Native university art departments.
Sonya Kelliher-Combs' "Salmon Curl" (2023) exemplifies violent beauty of life’s cycles across species. Mary Sully's portraits of white celebrities reimagining fame through a Dakota aesthetic lens lampoon the culture that excluded her.
The exhibition translates approach across nine rooms, with each of the fifteen artists represented multiple times. Teasing the show's primary theme, "Man-made Land" (2025), commissioned from Caroline Monnet, is installed diagonally in ICA’s slanted foyer wall as a unique, though ancillary, exhibition.
Raven Chacon's installation "Controlled Burn" (2025) hums like a distant engine, marking what cannot be entered. Kimowan Metchewais' work fuses landscape photography with the blanket's horizontal stripes rendered here in ruddy hues like dried blood. Jaune Quick-to-See Smith's works extend this thread employing canvas as a rich stand-in for the animal hides used to construct Plains tipis.
Humor permeates throughout, from caption to composition in Anna Tsouhlarakis’s "IF SHE WAS AT THE PARTY, SHE WOULD HAVE DUMPED MORE THAN TEA" (2025), signaling unsustainability and whitewashing of U.S. life and history.
The show pushes boundaries, delivering disquietude for settlers, delight and laughter for Native attendees opening weekend. It delivers something beyond representationalism—evolving toward resistance and circumnavigation of the colonial gaze.
ICA Boston's "An Indigenous Present" Show Transcends Borders of Art and Culture