First American Art Magazine No. 17, Winter 2017/18 | Page 10

EDITOR’S GREETING T America Meredith (Cherokee Nation), God Gives the World to Arapaho Children, 2004, acrylic and mica on steel, 36 × 16 in., private collection. HE RELATIONSHIP between Indigenous commu- nities and the nation-state has long been complicated. These relationships rise to the fore in this issue, as do the visual arts being a way for Indigenous communities to engage with international populations. The Garinagu are an Indigenous society descended from Carib, Arawak, and West African peoples. In the late 18th century, British colonists removed the Garinagu from their homes in the Lesser Antilles to an island north of Honduras. From there, the Garinagu migrated to Guatemala, Belize, and Nicaragua. They are both African diaspora and Indigenous diaspora that meet the challenge of maintaining their cultural identity despite their commu- nity spanning several nation-states. Peter Szok focuses on the Garinagu in Belize to explain how Benjamin Nicholas (1930–2012) and his fellow Garifuna artists have used painting as a strategy to assert their identity both within their own communities and to the outside world. Just as Indigenous peoples span international boundaries, so does their participation in the art world. Andrea L. Ferber explores world Indigenous artists’ participation in documenta 14, a quinquennial art fair established in Kassel, Germany. This year docu- menta took the daring step of creating a parallel fair in the beleaguered Greek capital city of Athens. While criticisms have rained down freely upon the organizers, documenta 14 still offers much for us to celebrate. By inviting Candice Hopkins (Carcross/ Tagish) to curate, documenta 14 gave concrete power to an Indigenous voice. As Ferber leads us through the Indigenous contributions to the Kassel and Athens fairs, Hopkins’s choice to feature the late Kwakwaka’wakw carver Beau Dick’s series of m asks stand out as an Indigenous artist showing an Indigenous art form on a world stage. This matters, because all too 8 | WWW.FIRSTAMERICANARTMAGAZINE.COM often contemporary Native artists are required to conform to the prevailing Western art practices in order to gain access to such a platform. The humble Indigenous art media of Wixárika (Huichol) beadwork is contextualized in Kevin Simpson’s moving account of his friendship with Jacinto López Ramírez. This Wixárika spiritual healer passed on in 2007, but not before making his contribution to Wixárika art. This unique practice of inlaying glass beads in beeswax has roots in ceremonial offerings, and grew out of the Wixáritari’s need to fund their increasingly difficult pilgrimages to their sacred site of Wirikuta to harvest their ceremonial medicine. Now an internationally recognized art form, it can be found far beyond the borders of Mexico. Utilizing the visual arts as a way for Indigenous communities to remain in their homelands and maintain their ceremonial and daily cultural practices is continued in Staci Golar’s article about the Keshi Foundation, a nonprofit organization with a mission to develop “pathways and opportuni- ties to benefit the people of the Zuni Pueblo, NM, through their arts and education.” Zuni is the largest pueblo in New Mexico and Golar writes that seventy percent of the tribe is engaged in the arts as a primary or secondary source of income. While the art market is often viewed with suspicion, or as somehow tainted, the reality is art sales can and do help Native families live on their own land and helps parents provide for their children. To this end, the Keshi Foundation created the Zuni Show, an art market that proved successful in its first year and built on that success in its second. The foun- dation’s ambitions continue to grow and include plans for the possibility of free Wi-Fi at the pueblo, allowing Zuni people to connect to the world and to provide opportunities for their people on their own terms. —America Meredith