Given time

sensory aesthetics of reclamation

In the notes of God is Red, the prominent Standing Rock Sioux Native Studies scholar, lawyer, and activist, Vine Deloria Jr. states, “Most Americans, raised in a society in which history is all-encompassing, have very little idea of how radically their values would shift if they took the idea of places…seriously.” Given Time: Sensory Aesthetics of Reclamation seeks to challenge the dominance of historical narrative by centering Indigenous relationships to land and place through sensory, time-based media. This exhibition reflects on how film, a medium defined by its capacity to recompose temporal experience, can be used to create multi-sensorial engagement with place. Interweaving documentary narrative and abstract imagery, these works engage in visual storytelling that challenges colonial claims to land and history. The artists subvert chronological time to focus on representations of land, traversing personal and shared relations to reclaim Indigenous emplacement.

Given Time further highlights issues of Native sovereignty, environmental sustainability, and identity by foregrounding an Indigenous relationship to land and place through diverse works from the Center of Southwest Studies’ museum collections. Building on themes from the films, these works ground Indigenous visual culture and artistic practice in the landscape and homelands from which they come.

Given Time: Sensory Aesthetics of Reclamation is guest curated by Assistant Professor of Native American and Indigenous Studies Dr. Megan Alvarado-Saggese, and is made possible with a grant from the City of Durango Arts & Culture Lodgers’ Tax Fund.

  • Angelo Baca (Diné/Hopi)

    Sky Hopinka (Ho-Chunk Nation/Pechanga Band of Luiseño Indians)

    New Red Order—a public secret society founded by Jackson Polys (Tlingit), Zack Khalil (Ojibway), and Adam Khalil (Ojibway)

  • Tony Abeyta (Diné)

    Berdine Begay (Diné)

    RC Gorman (Diné)

    Marietta Juanico (Pueblo of Acoma)

    Mabel Myers (Diné)

    Fritz Scholder(La Jolla Band of Luiseño Indians)

    Robert Dale Tsosie (Picuris Pueblo/Diné)

    Sam Two Bulls (Oglala Sioux-Pine Ridge Reservation)

  • Dr. Megan Alvarado-Saggese is an Assistant Professor of Native American and Indigenous Studies at Fort Lewis College in Durango, CO. Her teaching and research focus on Indigenous artistic practice in the Americas, bringing Latin American Indigenous visual cultures into conversation with Native American scholarship. Taking a hemispheric approach to Indigenous studies, Dr. Alvarado-Saggese looks at intersections and resonances within Indigenous intellectual thought and strategies of resistance across the Americas. She is currently engaged in a research project that critically reconsiders the political influence of indigenismo on Latin American modernist art.

    Alvarado-Saggese holds a Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in rhetoric with a designated emphasis in film and media studies, and a M.A. in Theological Studies from Harvard Divinity School with a focus on visual studies and iconography in Latin America.

Dates
October 24, 2024 - April 24, 2025

Location
Center of Southwest Studies at Fort Lewis College (Durango, CO)

Curated by
Megan Alvarado-Saggese, PhD

Oversaw
Exhibition installation; lighting and didactics; artist communications and film licensing agreements; press materials and promotion; exhibition booklet design; reception and special programming; photo-documentation.

PRESS