Los Angeles Times

Native artists in action

Sterlin Harjo follows North American Indigenous creatives navigating careers.

- By Noel Murray

Writer-director-producer Sterlin Harjo co-created one of the best TV series of 2021 in “Reservatio­n Dogs,” a frequently funny and quietly haunting dramedy about Indigenous teenagers hanging out and plotting petty crimes in rural Oklahoma. The show’s premise is broad enough to allow Harjo and his largely Indigenous North American cast and crew to tackle just about any topic related to growing up poor and Native in the heartland.

Harjo’s documentar­y “Love and Fury” is similar, kind of a catch-all. The film was shot around the world, following a handful of Native American artists and musicians as they share their creations. “Love and Fury” has no real narrative. It’s primarily a collection of vignettes of varying strength.

Sometimes Harjo’s subjects are fiercely engaged with the connection­s between what they make and who they are, and they speak eloquently about the history of Native American art and how it has survived generation­s of genocide and government suppressio­n. They discuss the psychologi­cal damage done by cultural appropriat­ion, and they analyze the ways in which a tradition of community is often ingrained in what Indigenous artists make.

And sometimes they just goof around. But that’s also part of the point of “Love and Fury.” Harjo and his crew capture the diversity within Indigenous culture by turning their cameras on a variety of folks, some toiling on the margins and some experienci­ng more mainstream success.

Subjects include Pulitzer-nominated “There There” author Tommy Orange, veteran art-folk musician Micah P. Hinson, comedian and performanc­e artist Bobby “Dues” Wilson and jazz vocalist Julia Keefe. Some center the Native experience in their work, but many don’t. None can be easily pigeonhole­d.

The looseness of “Love and Fury” can make it feel self-indulgent, as though Harjo just cut together a bunch of disconnect­ed footage of his friends and colleagues and called it a documentar­y.

But that’s also what makes the film so affecting. Many of these performanc­es and interviews are incredibly powerful — especially anything involving the opinionate­d, demon-plagued Hinson and the sweet-natured, passionate Wilson.

If Harjo wants to put all these remarkable artists in one place, to let them tell their stories and to show their work, why not? Just like creativity, acts of thoughtful curation have enduring value.

 ?? Array Releasing ?? MICAH P. HINSON, an art-folk singer, is featured in “Love and Fury.”
Array Releasing MICAH P. HINSON, an art-folk singer, is featured in “Love and Fury.”

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