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Common Thread: Female Perspectives from the Arctic

Fri, August 16, 2024Sun, January 5, 2025

Aslaug Magdalena Juliussen (Sámi, Norway), <em>Várddus – Vy – View</em>, 2017–2023, textiles, fibers, animal skin, 71” x 51” x 2”, photograph courtesy of Kunstnerforbundet.

Aslaug Magdalena Juliussen (Sámi, Norway), Várddus – Vy – View, 2017–2023, textiles, fibers, animal skin, 71” x 51” x 2”, photograph courtesy of Kunstnerforbundet.

For millennia Indigenous peoples of the North have lived in harmony with the land and sea. The twelve artists and activists in the exhibition Common Thread: Female Perspectives from the Arctic continue this relationship. Their artworks examine important issues, including land rights, borders, environmental concerns, language and cultural preservation, identity, self-representation, and violence against Indigenous peoples. These works also highlight artists’s connection to place, the natural world, and their communities.

Northern homelands are some of the first regions in the world negatively affected by climate change. Living in environments altered by unprecedented rates of sea ice loss, temperature and sea level rise, ocean acidification, animal population declines, reductions in wild plant yields and diversity, permafrost thaw, and severe coastal erosion, many Indigenous peoples find their way of life also threatened, causing profound physical and emotional damage. The physical, spiritual, and cultural health of their communities is intertwined with activities practiced over countless generations. The imposition of colonial social and work customs continue to fracture relationships to the environment and its plants, animals, marine life, and birds—all essential to the well-being of Indigenous communities. Common Thread artists use their works to provoke a discussion about the changing North and effects of colonialization, fostering opportunities for positive change and healing. The exhibition was guest-curated by Sonya Kelliher-Combs (Iñupiaq and Athabaskan). Among the artists are Jenny Miller (Iñupiaq, Alaska), Holly Nordlum (Iñupiaq, Alaska), Melissa Shaginoff (Ahtna and Paiute, Alaska), Maureen Gruben (Inuvialuk, Canada), Taqralik Partridge (Inuk, Canada), Marja Helander (Sámi, Finland), Julie Edel Hardenberg (Inuk, Greenland), Jessie Kleemann (Kalaaleq, Greenland), Sissel M. Bergh (Sámi, Norway), Aslaug Magdalena Juliussen (Sámi, Norway), and Britta Marakatt-Labba (Sámi, Sweden).

Details

Start:
Fri, August 16
End:
Sun, January 5, 2025
Event Category:

Organizer

IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (MoCNA)
Phone:
(888) 922-4242

Venue

IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (MoCNA) South Gallery
108 Cathedral Place
Santa Fe, 87501 United States
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Phone:
(888) 922-4242