Daily Camera (Boulder)

NYC museum showcases Indigenous perspectiv­es

- By Deepti Hajela Associated Press

NEW YORK — In his first visit to the American Museum of Natural History, Morgan Guerin had a list. Not of things he wanted to check out, though — a list of things that he hated.

It started with seeing certain regalia from his Musqueam Indian Band — sacred objects not intended for public display — in the museum’s Northwest Coast Hall.

This wasn’t just any visit. Guerin was there at the museum’s invitation in 2017 for the start of a project to renovate the hall, incorporat­ing Indigenous perspectiv­es. For him and representa­tives of other Indigenous communitie­s in the Pacific Northwest and western Canada, the 5-year, $19-million renovation of the Northwest Coast Hall, which reopened to the public Friday, was an opportunit­y to tell their stories themselves.

“Our people are very, very tired of being ‘studied,’ because the misconcept­ion of who we are has always been the outside community’s downfall,” he said. “We have always been here, ready to tell people who we are.”

The hall was the museum’s first gallery, opened in 1899 under the auspices of Franz Boas, an anthropolo­gist who was deeply interested in the Indigenous cultures of the Northwest and western coastal Canada. Boas was also a proponent of what was then a revolution­ary idea that different cultures should be looked at in their own right and not on some kind of comparativ­e scale.

It had largely remained unchanged, though, since the early 1900s. When museum officials decided it was time to renovate, they knew they couldn’t do it without input from the people whose cultures are on display.

The museum brought together representa­tives of the Indigenous communitie­s to talk about what the gallery should contain and what it should look like for the showcase of 10 Pacific Northwest tribal nations.

It wasn’t a simple process, made even less so by the impact of the pandemic, which forced remote instead of in-person collaborat­ions.

The hall includes some iconic pieces that anyone who has been to the museum will remember — including a massive 63-foot-long canoe that for decades was placed outside the hall but has now been brought in and suspended from the ceiling along with several giant carvings.

In what’s new, items on display are accompanie­d by text in both English and Indigenous languages and the hall includes a gallery section showing how younger Indigenous artists are using motifs and designs from prior generation­s. There’s also a video piece with people talking about the tribes’ pasts, and their concerns in the present.

There remains the fundamenta­l question of whether museums should be holding these collection­s and trying to tell these stories in the first place, given the role that theft and colonializ­ation has played in building them.

Museums “seem to function as very expensive, and in the case of the American Museum of Natural History, maybe the most expensive, trophy cases in the world,” said Haa’yuups, co-curator of the hall, who is Head of the House of Takiishtak­amlthat-h the Huupa‘chesat-h First Nation.

He said, “They seem to have a meta-language about them or a meta-message: ‘Aren’t we powerful? Don’t we go forth and dominate the world?’“

Haa’yuups saw his involvemen­t as a way to help spur a difference, to get people thinking about whether the items on display would be better served by being with the people they came from.

“Does it make sense to have a bunch of people who have nothing to do with those objects, to have them spend their lives managing them?” he said. “Or does it make sense to send those treasures back to the communitie­s where they come from?”

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