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The First Peoples Exhibition features Native California and beyond

The First Peoples Exhibition features Native California and beyond

The First Peoples Exhibition features Native California and beyond

 

Earlier this month the First Peoples: A Celebration of Native artists in Southern California exhibition opened featuring 29 Native American artists and 100 works.

The showing – which was organized by Walter L. Meyer, a Los Angeles based independent curator – highlights artists who are from California tribes as well as those who reside in the state. California Indian artists who are being showcased include Sam Banegas (Cahuilla/Luiseño), Gerald Clarke Jr. (Cahuilla Band of Indians), River Garza (Tongva), Timothy Ryan Ornelas (Fernandeño Tataviam), Craig Torres (Tongva), and Gail Werner (Cupeño/Luiseño/Kumeyaay).

First Peoples aim is to present myriad answers to the question: What does it mean to be a Native artist? Visitors to the exhibition can expect to see the following:

Photographs of Native Americans provocatively dressed as Hollywood icons. Contemporary baskets and pottery made traditionally. A poignant video interview with a Native grandmother. Paintings, watercolors, prints and mixed media art that interpret Native life, spirituality and identity. An elaborate buckskin dress made for a TV soap star by the family of fabled Comanche chief Quanah Parker. A “domestic installation” that comments on parallels between gang attire and native regalia.

The exhibition is from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the San Fernando Valley Arts & Cultural Center, 18312 Oxnard Street, Tarzana. The showing will close on Saturday, April 22. More information at http://sfvacc.org/

See Also

 

Artwork by Gerald Clarke Jr.

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