The Day

Indigenous artist makes history at Venice show

- By COLLEEN BARRY

— Jeffrey Gibson’s takeover Venice. Italy of the U.S. pavilion for this year’s Venice Biennale contempora­ry art show is a celebratio­n of color, pattern and craft, which is immediatel­y evident on approachin­g the bright red facade decorated by a colorful clash of geometry and a foreground dominated by a riot of gigantic red podiums.

Gibson, a Mississipp­i Choctaw with Cherokee descent, is the first Native American to represent the United States solo at the Venice Biennale, the world’s oldest contempora­ry art show. For context, the last time Native American artists were included was in 1932.

Gibson, 52, accepts the weight of the honor, but he prefers to focus on how his participat­ion can forge greater inclusion going forward.

“The first is not the most important story,” Gibson told The Associated Press this week before the pavilion’s inaugurati­on on Thursday. “The first is hopefully the beginning of many, many, many more stories to come.”

The commission, his first major show in Europe, comes at a pivotal moment for Gibson. His 2023 book “An Indigenous Present” features more than 60 Indigenous artists, and he has two major new projects, a facade commission for the Metropolit­an Museum of Art in New York and an exhibition at the Massachuse­tts Museum of Contempora­ry Art.

Gibson’s eye-catching exhibition titled “the space in which to place me,” features text in beadwork sculptures and paintings taken from U.S. founding documents, music, sermons and proverbs to remind the viewer of the broken promises of equity through U.S. history. The vibrant use of color projects optimism. In that way, Gibson’s art is a call to action.

“What I find so beautiful about Jeffrey’s work is its ability to function as a prism, to take the traumas of the past and the questions about identity and politics and refract them in such a way that things that realities that have become flattened … can become these beautiful kaleidosco­pes, which are joyous and celebrator­y and critical all at the same time,” said Abigail Winograd, one of the exhibition’s curators.

 ?? LUCA BRUNO AP PHOTO ?? Artist Jeffrey Gibson poses inside the U.S. pavilion during the media open day at the 60th Biennale of Arts in Venice, Italy, on Tuesday. A Mississipp­i Choctaw of Cherokee descent, Gibson is the first Native American to represent the United States solo at the Venice Biennale, the world’s oldest contempora­ry art show. Gibson mixes Western modernism and Native American craft in his vibrantly hued paintings and sculptures.
LUCA BRUNO AP PHOTO Artist Jeffrey Gibson poses inside the U.S. pavilion during the media open day at the 60th Biennale of Arts in Venice, Italy, on Tuesday. A Mississipp­i Choctaw of Cherokee descent, Gibson is the first Native American to represent the United States solo at the Venice Biennale, the world’s oldest contempora­ry art show. Gibson mixes Western modernism and Native American craft in his vibrantly hued paintings and sculptures.

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