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Dana Claxton

Dana Claxton (born 1959)[1] is a Hunkpapa Lakota filmmaker, photographer, and performance artist. Her work looks at stereotypes, historical context, and gender studies of Indigenous peoples of the Americas, specifically those of the First Nations. In 2007, she was awarded an Eiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art.

Dana Claxton
Born1959 (age 63–64)
NationalityHunkpapa Lakota
Known forFilm, performance, and photography
Websitedanaclaxton.com

Background Edit

Heritage and early life Edit

Claxton's family are descendants of Sitting Bull's followers who escaped persecution by the U.S. Army in 1876 after the Battle of the Little Bighorn, heading to Canada.[2] Growing up in Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan, she is the youngest of four siblings. Her family's reserve, Wood Mountain Lakota First Nation,[3] is located in Southwest Saskatchewan.[2][3][4]

Teaching and video production Edit

Claxton co-founded the Indigenous Media Arts Group and has taught at the Emily Carr University of Art and Design in Vancouver. In 2003 she served as the Global Television Chair at the University of Regina where she taught at the school of journalism.[5] In 2010 she served as Simon Fraser University's Ruth Wynn Woodward Chair in Women's Studies.[6]

She has worked closely with numerous Canadian and First Nations organizations, such as the National Film Board of Canada, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, among others. She served as director and producer for 52 episodes of the Canadian program Wakanheja, a First Nations oriented children's program and 26 episodes of ArtZone, an art show for teenagers. She also served as producer and a storyteller for First Stories-VTV, a program about the Aboriginal population of Vancouver.[7]

Current life Edit

When not creating art, Claxton serves on panel discussions, as an art juror, curator, as well as a mentor for young and emerging artists. Claxton lives in Vancouver, British Columbia and is a faculty member at the University of British Columbia.[3][4][8] She previously studied acting at HB Studio[9] in New York City.

Artistic career Edit

I'm influenced by my own experience as a Lakota woman, as a Canadian, a mixed blood Canadian, and then my own relationship to the natural and supernatural world. So taking that whole bundle of experiences, it all goes in to the artwork, I think that's where the multi-layering comes in because I've had a very multi-layered life. And it's all those experiences that go in to the work. – Dana Claxton, 2007[10]

Claxton combines her own world-view with Indigenous issues from the past and present. She investigates concerns about colonization, body imagery, beauty, politics, spirituality and the iconography of Native peoples and how it is placed in popular culture. Through video, photography and conceptual projects Claxton strives to blend traditional experiences and environments within contemporary spaces[4][10]

Video Edit

Claxton's video creations started in the early 1990s. Experimenting with video in works such as Grant Her Restitution (1991) and I Want To Know Why (1994) where she explores the effects of colonialism on Canadian women. Evolving her artistic goals further, starting in 1996 with The Red Paper, Claxton proceeded to attempt to "bring spirit into the gallery space". Through the blending of the sacred and secular she incorporates traditional objects and symbols of Lakota spirituality in contemporary spaces and environs.[11]

Her numerous video projects have been shown in more than 15 countries.[7]

Photography Edit

In the series On to the Red Road (2006), Claxton brings together five photographs to take a look on femininity and clothing. Through the series Claxton is showing a model wearing traditional regalia slowly removing articles of clothing to reveal a sexy outfit, bringing questions of sexuality and gender bias to light.[11]

Paint Up (2009) features portraits of Joseph Paul, a ceremonial Salish Black Face dancer and Pow-wow dancer living on the Musqueam Indian Reserve. Up close, large scale color portraits of Paul with his face painted, these works have been described as "imposing images, striking and cool, throw down a challenge to the sterile, nonspiritual, materialistic view of contemporary life."[11]

Newer works such as the Mustang Suite take a vivid look at the meanings and stereotypes behind Indianess, specifically Black Elk's vision of the Horse Dance. A group of large C-prints, the mustang represents freedom and mobility, and is not necessarily displayed as a horse. Daddy's Gotta New Ride shows an Indigenous man in a black suit with face paint and braided hair, standing next to a red Ford Mustang. Baby Girls Gotta Mustang features twin girls in red dresses and mukluks on bicycles. Another in the series, Mama Has a Pony Girl…Named History and Sets Her Free, shows a medicine woman with her arms outstretched and a Caucasian woman danced like a burlesque pony girl. The image is meant to support Aboriginal women who wish to release themselves from the binds of history, specifically one filled with sexualized stereotypes. Other images in the series are large scale reflections on the Indigenous community in a contemporary world.[12]

Claxton has also focused on the American Indian Movement which features blown up black-and-white photos of declassified government documents about the at times controversial civil rights organization. The documents were collected when Claxton lived in New York City in the late 1980s and early 1990s, from the New York Public Library. The reporting documents have many blacked out words, notorious of other government documents from the FBI and related organizations.[12]

Claxton's photography has been featured in the book #NotYourPrincess Voices of Native American Women (2017), which was edited by Lisa Charleyboy and Mary Beth Leatherdale. Included in her art piece Onto the Red Road, Claxton states that "[it] is about transformation, spirituality, and objectification of Indigenous [women]." When asked "what it means to be an NDN woman," Claxton cites "care for your family and community with generosity, courage, wisdom, and fortitude."

Major works Edit

Buffalo Bone China Edit

 
An American bison

In Buffalo Bone China Claxton blends performance art, found objects and video to dissect the effects upon First Nations peoples due to policies from colonial Great Britain regarding the American bison. Bison were slaughtered and their bones crushed and exported to England to make bone china.

In the performance Claxton smashes pieces of china and makes four bundles, placing the bundles in a sacred circle while a video of buffalo plays in the background. "Feeling the loss of the buffalo, the backbone of Plains spirituality and sustenance, the artist uses a rubber mallet to destroy plates and bowls. The breaking of the china refers to the use of buffalo bones in the making of bone china during the period of exploitation and decimation of the buffalo."[13] Claxton only smashed British bone China.[14]

Buffalo Bone China was exhibited at the MacKenzie Art Gallery[15] in Canada from 23 May 2009 to 13 September 2009, as well as the Vancouver Art Gallery[16] from 27 October 2018 to 3 February 2019.

Sitting Bull and the Moose Jaw Sioux Edit

Created in 2003 and displayed at the 17th Biennale of Sydney, Sitting Bull and the Moose Jaw Sioux brings together landscape scenery, interviews and images to examine the founding of the Moose Jaw camp, the camp founded by Sitting Bull after exodus out of the United States after the Battle of Little Bighorn. The piece, originally commissioned by the Moose Jaw Art Gallery, features four video screens, archival images and interviews from the camps original inhabitants, as well as footage of the site.[11]

Awards Edit

In 2019, the Hnatyshyn Foundation awarded Claxton their prize for outstanding achievement by a mid-career Canadian artist.[17] In 2019 Claxton received the YWCA Women of Distinction Award in the category of Arts, Culture and Design. Claxton won the 2020 Governor General's Award for Artistic Achievement in the Visual Arts Category.[18]

Notable collections Edit

Exhibitions Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Great women artists. Phaidon Press. 2019. p. 103. ISBN 978-0714878775.
  2. ^ a b Kristin Dowell (2005). "Exploring the Sacred in Aboriginal Performance Art". Short articles. E-Misferica. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d . Dana Claxton. Artsask. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d . Visual Arts Faculty. University of British Columbia. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  5. ^ . Retrospective. Dana Claxton. Archived from the original on 23 May 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  6. ^ "Images of Native Women". Simon Fraser University. 2010. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  7. ^ a b . The Global Network Visiting Chair. University of Regina. Archived from the original on 6 July 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  8. ^ "Art documents". Top Artists. The Artists. 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  9. ^ "HB Studio - Notable Alumni | One of the Original Acting Studios in NYC".
  10. ^ a b Monika Kin Gagnon. "Indigenous (re)memory and resistance: video works by Dana Claxton". The Free Library. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  11. ^ a b c d e . Artist. Biennale of Sydney. Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  12. ^ a b Robin Laurence (2010). "Dana Claxton's new interdisciplinary work is a cultural mashup". Visual Arts Review. Straight. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  13. ^ Willard (2007). . Homelands. Arts Ask. Archived from the original on 25 September 2018. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  14. ^ Griffin, Kevin (26 November 2018). "ART SEEN: Only British bone china allowed for Buffalo Bone China". Vancouver Sun. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
  15. ^ "Past Exhibitions". www.mackenzieartgallery.ca. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
  16. ^ "Vancouver Art Gallery". www.vanartgallery.bc.ca. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
  17. ^ "Dana Claxton Wins $25K Artist Prize, Leading Hnatyshyn Foundation Awards this Year". Canadian Art. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  18. ^ "Governor General`s Awards in Visual and Media Arts Archives". en.ggarts.ca. Governor General of Canada. Retrieved 18 August 2022.

External links Edit

  • on Tribe Inc.
  • Dana Claxton: Disturbing History in Canadian Art
  • Dana Claxton: From a Whisper to a Scream in Canadian Art
  • from The Vancouver Sun
  • Danger in Paradise an exhibition curated by Claxton
  • Red Paper from the Vancouver Art Gallery
  • Redskin Imaginary on YouTube a video by Lori Blondeau & Dana Claxton
  • The Mustang Suite by Dana Claxton
  • The Medicine Project by Dana Claxton

dana, claxton, born, 1959, hunkpapa, lakota, filmmaker, photographer, performance, artist, work, looks, stereotypes, historical, context, gender, studies, indigenous, peoples, americas, specifically, those, first, nations, 2007, awarded, eiteljorg, fellowship,. Dana Claxton born 1959 1 is a Hunkpapa Lakota filmmaker photographer and performance artist Her work looks at stereotypes historical context and gender studies of Indigenous peoples of the Americas specifically those of the First Nations In 2007 she was awarded an Eiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art Dana ClaxtonBorn1959 age 63 64 Yorkton Saskatchewan CanadaNationalityHunkpapa LakotaKnown forFilm performance and photographyWebsitedanaclaxton wbr com Contents 1 Background 1 1 Heritage and early life 1 2 Teaching and video production 1 3 Current life 2 Artistic career 2 1 Video 2 2 Photography 2 3 Major works 2 3 1 Buffalo Bone China 2 3 2 Sitting Bull and the Moose Jaw Sioux 3 Awards 4 Notable collections 5 Exhibitions 6 References 7 External linksBackground EditHeritage and early life Edit Claxton s family are descendants of Sitting Bull s followers who escaped persecution by the U S Army in 1876 after the Battle of the Little Bighorn heading to Canada 2 Growing up in Moose Jaw Saskatchewan she is the youngest of four siblings Her family s reserve Wood Mountain Lakota First Nation 3 is located in Southwest Saskatchewan 2 3 4 Teaching and video production Edit Claxton co founded the Indigenous Media Arts Group and has taught at the Emily Carr University of Art and Design in Vancouver In 2003 she served as the Global Television Chair at the University of Regina where she taught at the school of journalism 5 In 2010 she served as Simon Fraser University s Ruth Wynn Woodward Chair in Women s Studies 6 She has worked closely with numerous Canadian and First Nations organizations such as the National Film Board of Canada Canadian Broadcasting Corporation among others She served as director and producer for 52 episodes of the Canadian program Wakanheja a First Nations oriented children s program and 26 episodes of ArtZone an art show for teenagers She also served as producer and a storyteller for First Stories VTV a program about the Aboriginal population of Vancouver 7 Current life Edit When not creating art Claxton serves on panel discussions as an art juror curator as well as a mentor for young and emerging artists Claxton lives in Vancouver British Columbia and is a faculty member at the University of British Columbia 3 4 8 She previously studied acting at HB Studio 9 in New York City Artistic career EditI m influenced by my own experience as a Lakota woman as a Canadian a mixed blood Canadian and then my own relationship to the natural and supernatural world So taking that whole bundle of experiences it all goes in to the artwork I think that s where the multi layering comes in because I ve had a very multi layered life And it s all those experiences that go in to the work Dana Claxton 2007 10 Claxton combines her own world view with Indigenous issues from the past and present She investigates concerns about colonization body imagery beauty politics spirituality and the iconography of Native peoples and how it is placed in popular culture Through video photography and conceptual projects Claxton strives to blend traditional experiences and environments within contemporary spaces 4 10 Video Edit Claxton s video creations started in the early 1990s Experimenting with video in works such as Grant Her Restitution 1991 and I Want To Know Why 1994 where she explores the effects of colonialism on Canadian women Evolving her artistic goals further starting in 1996 with The Red Paper Claxton proceeded to attempt to bring spirit into the gallery space Through the blending of the sacred and secular she incorporates traditional objects and symbols of Lakota spirituality in contemporary spaces and environs 11 Her numerous video projects have been shown in more than 15 countries 7 Photography Edit In the series On to the Red Road 2006 Claxton brings together five photographs to take a look on femininity and clothing Through the series Claxton is showing a model wearing traditional regalia slowly removing articles of clothing to reveal a sexy outfit bringing questions of sexuality and gender bias to light 11 Paint Up 2009 features portraits of Joseph Paul a ceremonial Salish Black Face dancer and Pow wow dancer living on the Musqueam Indian Reserve Up close large scale color portraits of Paul with his face painted these works have been described as imposing images striking and cool throw down a challenge to the sterile nonspiritual materialistic view of contemporary life 11 Newer works such as the Mustang Suite take a vivid look at the meanings and stereotypes behind Indianess specifically Black Elk s vision of the Horse Dance A group of large C prints the mustang represents freedom and mobility and is not necessarily displayed as a horse Daddy s Gotta New Ride shows an Indigenous man in a black suit with face paint and braided hair standing next to a red Ford Mustang Baby Girls Gotta Mustang features twin girls in red dresses and mukluks on bicycles Another in the series Mama Has a Pony Girl Named History and Sets Her Free shows a medicine woman with her arms outstretched and a Caucasian woman danced like a burlesque pony girl The image is meant to support Aboriginal women who wish to release themselves from the binds of history specifically one filled with sexualized stereotypes Other images in the series are large scale reflections on the Indigenous community in a contemporary world 12 Claxton has also focused on the American Indian Movement which features blown up black and white photos of declassified government documents about the at times controversial civil rights organization The documents were collected when Claxton lived in New York City in the late 1980s and early 1990s from the New York Public Library The reporting documents have many blacked out words notorious of other government documents from the FBI and related organizations 12 Claxton s photography has been featured in the book NotYourPrincess Voices of Native American Women 2017 which was edited by Lisa Charleyboy and Mary Beth Leatherdale Included in her art piece Onto the Red Road Claxton states that it is about transformation spirituality and objectification of Indigenous women When asked what it means to be an NDN woman Claxton cites care for your family and community with generosity courage wisdom and fortitude Major works Edit Buffalo Bone China Edit An American bisonIn Buffalo Bone China Claxton blends performance art found objects and video to dissect the effects upon First Nations peoples due to policies from colonial Great Britain regarding the American bison Bison were slaughtered and their bones crushed and exported to England to make bone china In the performance Claxton smashes pieces of china and makes four bundles placing the bundles in a sacred circle while a video of buffalo plays in the background Feeling the loss of the buffalo the backbone of Plains spirituality and sustenance the artist uses a rubber mallet to destroy plates and bowls The breaking of the china refers to the use of buffalo bones in the making of bone china during the period of exploitation and decimation of the buffalo 13 Claxton only smashed British bone China 14 Buffalo Bone China was exhibited at the MacKenzie Art Gallery 15 in Canada from 23 May 2009 to 13 September 2009 as well as the Vancouver Art Gallery 16 from 27 October 2018 to 3 February 2019 Sitting Bull and the Moose Jaw Sioux Edit Created in 2003 and displayed at the 17th Biennale of Sydney Sitting Bull and the Moose Jaw Sioux brings together landscape scenery interviews and images to examine the founding of the Moose Jaw camp the camp founded by Sitting Bull after exodus out of the United States after the Battle of Little Bighorn The piece originally commissioned by the Moose Jaw Art Gallery features four video screens archival images and interviews from the camps original inhabitants as well as footage of the site 11 Awards EditIn 2019 the Hnatyshyn Foundation awarded Claxton their prize for outstanding achievement by a mid career Canadian artist 17 In 2019 Claxton received the YWCA Women of Distinction Award in the category of Arts Culture and Design Claxton won the 2020 Governor General s Award for Artistic Achievement in the Visual Arts Category 18 Notable collections EditCanada Council Art Bank Colby College Museum of Art Vancouver Art Gallery Winnipeg Art Gallery 3 Exhibitions EditTime and Tide Flow Wide 2023 Colby College Museum of Art Fringing the Cube 2018 19 Vancouver Art Gallery Solo show 2010 Biennale of Sydney Native Visuality 2009 C N Gorman Museum New Work 2009 University of Lethbridge Steeling the Gaze 2009 National Gallery of Canada Solo show 2007 Montreal Biennale Eiteljorg Fellowship for Native American Fine Art 2007 Eiteljorg Museum Solo show 2006 Biennale d art contemporain du Havre Solo show 2005 Art Star Biennale Gatherings Aboriginal Art from the Collection of the Winnipeg Art Gallery 2004 Guangdong Museum of Art Topographies 1996 Vancouver Art Gallery 4 11 References Edit Great women artists Phaidon Press 2019 p 103 ISBN 978 0714878775 a b Kristin Dowell 2005 Exploring the Sacred in Aboriginal Performance Art Short articles E Misferica Retrieved 3 March 2011 a b c d About the Artist Dana Claxton Artsask Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 3 March 2011 a b c d Dana Claxton Visual Arts Faculty University of British Columbia Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 3 March 2011 Artist Bio Retrospective Dana Claxton Archived from the original on 23 May 2011 Retrieved 3 March 2011 Images of Native Women Simon Fraser University 2010 Retrieved 3 March 2011 a b 2003 2004 Dana Claxton The Global Network Visiting Chair University of Regina Archived from the original on 6 July 2011 Retrieved 3 March 2011 Art documents Top Artists The Artists 2011 Retrieved 3 March 2011 HB Studio Notable Alumni One of the Original Acting Studios in NYC a b Monika Kin Gagnon Indigenous re memory and resistance video works by Dana Claxton The Free Library Retrieved 3 March 2011 a b c d e Dana Claxton Artist Biennale of Sydney Archived from the original on 8 July 2011 Retrieved 3 March 2011 a b Robin Laurence 2010 Dana Claxton s new interdisciplinary work is a cultural mashup Visual Arts Review Straight Retrieved 3 March 2011 Willard 2007 Buffalo Bone China Homelands Arts Ask Archived from the original on 25 September 2018 Retrieved 3 March 2011 Griffin Kevin 26 November 2018 ART SEEN Only British bone china allowed for Buffalo Bone China Vancouver Sun Retrieved 19 March 2019 Past Exhibitions www mackenzieartgallery ca Retrieved 19 March 2019 Vancouver Art Gallery www vanartgallery bc ca Retrieved 19 March 2019 Dana Claxton Wins 25K Artist Prize Leading Hnatyshyn Foundation Awards this Year Canadian Art Retrieved 17 October 2019 Governor General s Awards in Visual and Media Arts Archives en ggarts ca Governor General of Canada Retrieved 18 August 2022 External links EditDana Claxton Buffalo Bone China on Tribe Inc Dana Claxton Disturbing History in Canadian Art Dana Claxton From a Whisper to a Scream in Canadian Art Dana Claxton and the Power of Looking from The Vancouver Sun Danger in Paradise an exhibition curated by Claxton Red Paper from the Vancouver Art Gallery Redskin Imaginary on YouTube a video by Lori Blondeau amp Dana Claxton The Mustang Suite by Dana Claxton The Medicine Project by Dana Claxton Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dana Claxton amp oldid 1145487936, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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