Jeffrey Gibson's "An Indigenous Present" at ICA Boston challenges conventional notions of Native art beyond representationalism. The show, co-organized by Gibson and Jenelle Porter, features the work of 15 abstract Native artists, all from outside Massachusetts tribes. This absence is not coincidental, given the historical gap in Native representation in contemporary art institutions.
Gibson's curation untangles these artists from "fine art" rhetoric, bringing together diverse Native culture bearers who share space within Indigenous contexts but rarely unite in Western institutions. He juxtaposes Jamie Okuma's cradleboard with Philip J. Deloria's essay, Layli Long Soldier's poem next to Marie Watt's tin-jingle embellished blanket, peeling back Western superimpositions to reveal a natural cohesion that transcends page and gallery.
The exhibition translates this approach across nine rooms, showcasing the breadth of contemporary Native abstraction. Artists like Sonya Kelliher-Combs and Mary Sully use humor as a primary tool to challenge Western aesthetics and cultural norms. Gibson's approach is both eclectic and cohesive, creating a sense of disorientation that forces viewers to reevaluate their assumptions about Native art.
The show also tackles issues of land ownership and Indigenous demesne, with Caroline Monnet's "Man-made Land" (2025) commissioned for the exhibition. This installation depicts abstract botanical blooms rendered with thousands of oblong and stylized pieces of black, clear, and silver Tyvek, plastic, and foil, evoking flowers on the harbor's edge that perform land repair and establish Indigenous demesne.
Other artists, such as Kimowan Metchewais, explore themes of isolation and structural neglect in their work. Metchewais' "Chief's Blanket" (2002) fuses landscape photography with the iconic Navajo chief's blanket pattern, creating a dark yet resilient meditation on Indigenous history.
While some works succeed more than others in translating abstraction's power, the exhibition as a whole delivers a gift: disquietude for settlers, delight and laughter for Native attendees. Gibson and Porter enlist Indigenous principles—reciprocity and gift economies—and in return, viewers laugh, and settlers learn. "An Indigenous Present" is a must-see exhibition that challenges conventional notions of Native art and offers a powerful statement about the importance of inclusivity and representation.
Gibson's curation untangles these artists from "fine art" rhetoric, bringing together diverse Native culture bearers who share space within Indigenous contexts but rarely unite in Western institutions. He juxtaposes Jamie Okuma's cradleboard with Philip J. Deloria's essay, Layli Long Soldier's poem next to Marie Watt's tin-jingle embellished blanket, peeling back Western superimpositions to reveal a natural cohesion that transcends page and gallery.
The exhibition translates this approach across nine rooms, showcasing the breadth of contemporary Native abstraction. Artists like Sonya Kelliher-Combs and Mary Sully use humor as a primary tool to challenge Western aesthetics and cultural norms. Gibson's approach is both eclectic and cohesive, creating a sense of disorientation that forces viewers to reevaluate their assumptions about Native art.
The show also tackles issues of land ownership and Indigenous demesne, with Caroline Monnet's "Man-made Land" (2025) commissioned for the exhibition. This installation depicts abstract botanical blooms rendered with thousands of oblong and stylized pieces of black, clear, and silver Tyvek, plastic, and foil, evoking flowers on the harbor's edge that perform land repair and establish Indigenous demesne.
Other artists, such as Kimowan Metchewais, explore themes of isolation and structural neglect in their work. Metchewais' "Chief's Blanket" (2002) fuses landscape photography with the iconic Navajo chief's blanket pattern, creating a dark yet resilient meditation on Indigenous history.
While some works succeed more than others in translating abstraction's power, the exhibition as a whole delivers a gift: disquietude for settlers, delight and laughter for Native attendees. Gibson and Porter enlist Indigenous principles—reciprocity and gift economies—and in return, viewers laugh, and settlers learn. "An Indigenous Present" is a must-see exhibition that challenges conventional notions of Native art and offers a powerful statement about the importance of inclusivity and representation.