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      Press Release

      New exhibition celebrates the creative collaboration of two contemporary Indigenous artists

      Released December 14, 2021

      Each/Other: Marie Watt and Cannupa Hanska Luger
      On view January 29–May 8, 2022

      SALEM, MA – The Peabody Essex Museum (PEM) presents an exhibition of two internationally-renowned contemporary Indigenous artists who view creativity as a boundless process that connects each of us. Marie Watt, an enrolled citizen of the Seneca Nation with German-Scots heritage, and Cannupa Hanska Luger, an enrolled citizen of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation with Lakota and European heritage, collaborate to create artwork that fosters empathy and understanding among individuals, neighbors, and communities and seeks to connect us to the world around us. Their art practice comes from — and aims to produce — activism and social engagement. Each/Other: Marie Watt and Cannupa Hanska Luger is organized by the Denver Art Museum and is on view at PEM from January 29, 2022 through May 8, 2022.

      For Marie Watt and Cannupa Hanska Luger, art can be a social project where participants become engaged, invested, and able to forge new relationships. The 26 large scale works on view represent a wide range of media — from carved wood and fabric sculpture to photography and video — and are divided into two sections that explore each artist’s creative interactions with community, materials and the land. Several works were produced through a collaboration with non-artist volunteers in what is known as “social practice”, artwork that focuses on the interaction between audience, social systems, and the creator. Visitors are encouraged to search for signs of the many hands that helped to create the works on view and consider how the natural environment contributed resources to this exhibition.

      “These works are tangible but, more importantly, are memories and evidence of collaborations — people coming together and taking part in something greater than themselves,” said Karen Kramer, PEM’s Curator of Native American and Oceanic Art and Culture. “Gathering to socialize and work on something together is often the way knowledge is shared and objects are made in Indigenous communities. For these artists, collaboration is not a means to an end. It’s central to their art practice, fuels their passion and spurs their action in making a difference in the world.”

      Working in tandem and across many days during the global pandemic, Watt and Luger merged their practices on Each/Other, (2020-2021) a larger-than-life sculpture created with people from around the world. The artists asked participants to embroider messages on bandanas and consider how acts of collaboration help heal broken bonds with the environment and with each other. They are bound together as a monumental, 20 x 12 x 9 foot she-wolf, a symbol which reflects the idea of kinship with animals inherent in Indigenous beliefs. The bandanas came to the artists by the hundreds, sent from a cross-section of people of various ages and ethnicities. Their timely messages include “MMIW,” calling attention to the missing and murdered Indigenous women epidemic and “Dismantle All Colonial Systems Now.” Some messages range from the personal to the universal, including “Be A Good Ancestor” and “I Miss Your Embrace.”

      Each/Other not only presents the results of Watt and Luger’s past collaborative projects, but invites us to be a part of the artists’ creative processes, and through that experience, to become aware of the world outside of our immediate and limited vision,” says John P. Lukavic, organizing curator and the Denver Art Museum’s Andrew W. Mellon Curator of Native Arts. “Together, Watt and Luger show us the ways in which art moves beyond the end-product, beyond a static or luxury item, to become the very process of creation itself — unbound and limitless.”

      For Luger, "Art is a verb, not a noun. Art is a practice, it’s an activity. It is an action." His art-making practice interweaves performance and political action to communicate stories about 21st-century Indigeneity. Using short instructional videos distributed on social media, some of Luger’s projects invite others into his creative process to collaborate on pressing issues. Although the participants from all corners of the world may never meet, each person is invested in the meaning of the work and each project celebrates the effort it takes to collectively affect change.

      Mirror Shield Project. Concept Artist: Cannupa Hanska Luger (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota and European). Drone operation/ Performance organization: Rory Wakemup. Oceti Sakowin camp, Standing Rock, ND 2016. Image courtesy of the artist.

      Mirror Shield Project. Concept Artist: Cannupa Hanska Luger (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota and European). Drone operation/ Performance organization: Rory Wakemup. Oceti Sakowin camp, Standing Rock, ND 2016. Image courtesy of the artist.

      Luger’s Mirror Shield Project resulted from a call to action as a direct political response to the acts of police against those defending clean water during the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline in 2016. Through an online call for collaborators and a series of in-person workshops, people across the country created mirrored, shield-like forms for the water protectors. Holding these while on the front lines of the standoff, the water protectors forced police officers to face their own humanity reflected in the mirrored surfaces. The mirrors, inspired by Ukranian women who used mirrors in a similar way during their 2014 uprising, have been used in various iterations in resistance movements across the world.

      Marie Watt (Seneca and German-Scots) Blanket Stories: Indian Territories, Round Dance, Grandmother, detail. 2016. Collection of Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles. As installed at the Denver Art Museum. Artwork © Marie Watt. Installation photography © Denver Art Museum.
      Marie Watt (Seneca and German-Scots) Blanket Stories: Indian Territories, Round Dance, Grandmother, detail. 2016.


      Watt’s ongoing crowd-sourced Blanket Stories is a series of sculptural works made from stacked blankets that the artist has described as a visualization of how we enter and leave this world: in blankets. The work is inspired by the stories of beginnings, endings and lives lived in between. The blankets, collected from the public, also reference how Native Americans gift blankets to mark and honor important life events.

      Cannupa Hanska Luger (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota and European). Every One, 2018. Ceramic, social collaboration.

      Another of Luger’s work on view is Every One (2018), a pixelated portrait made through social collaboration. Composed of over 4,000 individual handmade clay beads created by hundreds of people across the U.S. and Canada, the piece is meant to cut through the data and humanize the numbers of missing and murdered Indigenous women, girls, queer and trans community members. Realizing the connection between workers hired by lumber, oil, and gas companies and increased murders and disappearances, Luger asks us to shoulder some culpability in the processes that lead to such violence and to find ways to heal.

      Cannupa Hanska Luger (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota and European). Every One, 2018. Ceramic, social collaboration.

      As part of her artistic practice, Watt creates textiles that bring people together through sewing circles. For her 2017 work, Companion Species: Ferocious Mother and Canis Familiaris, Watt led a conversation on the theme of equity where she asked, “what would the world look like if we thought of ourselves as companion species; places, nations, generations, beings, all interconnected.” The resulting artwork — which has the words Equity, Love, Shelter, Solidarity, and Voice stitched onto the surface — helps us see the thoughts and feelings of people in the group made manifest by many hands working together.

      Marie Watt

      ABOUT MARIE WATT
      Based in Portland, Oregon, Marie Watt (b. 1967) is a citizen of the Seneca Nation whose practice explores multiple materials and the collaborative act of artmaking. Her artworks are held in collections across the United States and Canada, including the Peabody Essex Museum, Denver Art Museum, the Portland Art Museum, the Whitney Museum of American Art, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, and the National Gallery of Canada.

      Portrait of Marie Watt, 2020. Photo by Sam Gehrke

      Watt has received public art commissions from the Tacoma Art Museum, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Denver Art Museum, and the United States Embassy in Islamabad, Pakistan, through the U.S. State Department’s Art in Embassies program. Watt exhibits internationally and is represented in Portland, by PDX Contemporary Art, in Seattle, by Greg Kucera Gallery, and in New York by Marc Straus Gallery.

      Portrait Cannupa Hanska Luger, 2019. Photo by Brendan George Ko.
      Portrait Cannupa Hanska Luger, 2019. Photo by Brendan George Ko.


      ABOUT CANNUPA HANSKA LUGER
      Born on the Standing Rock reservation in North Dakota, Cannupa Hanska Luger (b. 1979) is a New Mexico-based interdisciplinary artist and a citizen of the Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation. His artworks address environmental justice and gender violence. From 2018 to 2020, Luger received fellowships and awards from such organizations as the Smithsonian Institution, the Center for Crafts, the Joan Mitchell Foundation, and the Museum of Arts and Design. Luger has exhibited at Princeton University Art Museum, Art Mûr, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Orenda Gallery, and the National Center for Civil and Human Rights, among others. Luger holds a BFA in studio arts from the Institute of American Indian Arts and is represented by Garth Greenan Gallery in New York.

      Publication
      This illustrated companion to Each/Other, available for purchase at the PEM Shop, features artworks by Indigenous contemporary artists Marie Watt, Cannupa Hanska Luger, and their collaborators. The catalog explores the collective process of artmaking and urges readers to reconsider how museums privilege certain stories and our places within systems that subjugate and disenfranchise.

      Gallery Labels
      Each/Other: Marie Watt and Cannupa Hanska Luger
      features bilingual labels in English and Spanish. As part of PEM’s Bilingual Initiative, these translations strive to engage multicultural audiences and strengthen ties to our local communities.

      PRESS PREVIEW
      Save the date: Join us on Thursday, January 27 at 5 pm for a curator-led tour of the exhibition with the artists. Invitation to follow.

      PUBLICITY IMAGES
      High-resolution images are available upon request.

      SOCIAL MEDIA
      Share your impressions with us on social media using #EachOtheratPEM

      • IMAGE CREDITS
        Marie Watt (Seneca and German-Scots) and Cannupa Hanska Luger (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota, and European) Each/Other, 2020–21, as installed at the Denver Art Museum. Steel, wool, bandanas, and embroidery thread. Courtesy of the artists. Artwork © Marie Watt and Cannupa Hanska Luger. Installation photography © Denver Art Museum
      • Mirror Shield Project. Concept Artist: Cannupa Hanska Luger (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota and European). Drone operation/ Performance organization: Rory Wakemup. Oceti Sakowin camp, Standing Rock, ND 2016. Image courtesy of the artist.
      • Marie Watt (Seneca and German-Scots) Blanket Stories: Indian Territories, Round Dance, Grandmother, detail. 2016. Collection of Autry Museum of the American West, Los Angeles. As installed at the Denver Art Museum. Artwork © Marie Watt. Installation photography © Denver Art Museum.
      • Cannupa Hanska Luger (Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, Lakota and European). Every One, 2018. Ceramic, social collaboration. Image courtesy of Marie Walsh Sharpe Gallery of Contemporary Art at Ent Center for the Arts, UCCS, Colorado Springs, CO.
      • Portrait of Marie Watt, 2020. Photo by Sam Gehrke
      • Portrait Cannupa Hanska Luger, 2019. Photo by Brendan George Ko.


      SPONSORS
      Each/Other: Marie Watt and Cannupa Hanska Luger
      is organized by the Denver Art Museum and presented with the generous support of the National Endowment for the Arts, The Robert Lehman Foundation, Stelo, and Native Arts and Culture Foundation. Thank you to PEM supporters, Carolyn and Peter S. Lynch and The Lynch Foundation and individuals that support the Exhibition Incubation Fund: Jennifer and Andrew Borggaard, James B. and Mary Lou Hawkes, Kate and Ford O'Neil, and Henry and Callie Brauer provided generous support. We also recognize the generosity of the East India Marine Associates of the Peabody Essex Museum.

      National Endowment for the Arts logo


      PROTECTING HEALTH AND SAFELY
      The health and safety of PEM’s staff and visitors is our highest priority. PEM has increased its safety protocols, including the frequency and intensity of its sanitation and disinfection efforts across the museum. Face coverings are to be worn at all times. To learn more, visit pem.org/safety.

      ABOUT THE PEABODY ESSEX MUSEUM
      Over the last 20 years, the Peabody Essex Museum (PEM) has distinguished itself as one of the fastest-growing art museums in North America. Founded in 1799, it is also the country’s oldest continuously operating museum. At its heart is a mission to enrich and transform people's lives by broadening their perspectives, attitudes and knowledge of themselves and the wider world. PEM celebrates outstanding artistic and cultural creativity through exhibitions, programming and special events that emphasize cross-cultural connections, integrate past and present and underscore the vital importance of creative expression. The museum's collection is among the finest of its kind boasting superlative works from around the globe and across time – including American art and architecture, Asian export art, photography, maritime art and history, Native American, Oceanic, and African art, as well as one of the nation’s most important museum-based collections of rare books and manuscripts. PEM's campus offers a varied and unique visitor experience with hands-on creativity zones, interactive opportunities and performance spaces. Twenty-two noted historic structures grace PEM’s campus, including Yin Yu Tang, a 200-year-old Chinese house that is the only example of Chinese domestic architecture on display in the United States. HOURS: Open Thursdays, Saturdays & Sundays, 10 am–5 pm, and Fridays 10 am–7 pm. Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's Day. ADMISSION: Adults $20; seniors $18; students $12. Members, youth 16 and under and residents of Salem enjoy free general admission. INFO: Call 866-745-1876 or visit pem.org.

      MEDIA CONTACTS
      Whitney Van Dyke | Director of Communications | whitney_vandyke@pem.org | 978-542-1828
      Amelia Kantrovitz | Exhibition Publicist | amelia_kantrovitz@pem.org | 617-794-4964