Curator

  • Art Institute Chicago
  • Harvard art museum
  • My Exhibition
A work made of black ash, sweetgrass, copper and rit dye; medicine pouch containing sage, tobacco, sweetgrass, and cedar; glass vial containing emerald ash borer and isopropyl alcohol; usb flash drive.

Sustaining Traditions—Digital Teachings

2018

Kelly Church (Match-e-be-nash-she-wish Pottawatomi, Ottawa, and American, born 1967)

Michigan

Native artists such as Kelly Church, a fifth-generation basket maker, have relied on black ash trees to make baskets since time immemorial. Across the United States, however, these trees are being decimated by the emerald ash borer, an invasive insect. Church envisions a future when traditional knowledge keepers like herself may not be able to teach this art to the next generation. Inside this basket, she has placed a flash drive containing files that record this knowledge for her community, entrusting our museum to preserve it.

Black ash, sweetgrass, copper and Rit dye; medicine pouch containing sage, tobacco, sweetgrass, and cedar; glass vial containing emerald ash borer and isopropyl alcohol; USB flash drive

Women artists

Arts of the Americas

2020–21 acquisitions by BIPOC artists