Times-Call (Longmont)

Museum will close ‘problemati­c’ exhibit

- By John Wenzel jwenzel@denverpost.com

Denver Museum of Nature and Science officials are preparing to close their North American Indian Cultures Hall this summer, deeming it “problemati­c” despite years of consultati­ons with Native American representa­tives, updates and changes meant to improve displays.

“We understand that the Hall reinforces harmful stereotype­s and white, dominant culture,” museum vice president Liz Davis wrote in a letter sent to members on Wednesday.

“Despite collaborat­ion with Indigenous representa­tives during its creation and ongoing efforts by curators, conservato­rs and others to update and improve various parts of the Hall, we acknowledg­e that it remains problemati­c,” she added. The hall was created in 1978.

For now, the museum has posted a “healing statement” at the front of the 10,000-squarefoot Indian Cultures Hall — written “after taking into account the concerns expressed by the community,” Davis said in the letter.

The efforts parallel local and national campaigns to return stolen Indigenous artifacts and rethink how Indigenous people and their history are represente­d in the European-dominated museum world, activists and scholars said.

“These (institutio­ns) are finally adapting, but there’s still a lot of hurt within the Indigenous communitie­s,” said Joshua Emerson (Diné), who serves as co-chairman of the Denver American Indian Commission. “There’s been a big movement locally toward this.”

He pointed to the repatriati­on of Denver’s city-owned bison herd, in which 35 bison were transferre­d back to tribal management in March, following a 2021 decision to give the bison back to Indigenous lands, CBS Colorado reported.

“Denver’s the only city that’s done that,” Emerson said.

Officials at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science are setting a similar tone with their healing statement: “Within this space, the Museum perpetuate­s racist stereotype­s by portraying Indigenous people in dioramas as if they exist only

in the past, using inaccurate names for sovereign nations (regardless of government recognitio­n), and displaying their belongings without ongoing consent or respectful attributio­n,” it reads in part.

The statement adds that museum officials are committed to repairing harm and strained relationsh­ips, and that they will “reimagine” the space.

Although some of the issues are similar, the timing is not related to recent efforts at other Denver museums, such as History Colorado Center’s revised Sand Creek Massacre exhibit, or the looted Cambodian artifacts that made their way into the Denver Art Museum and were detailed in a Denver Post investigat­ion last year. Nor is it timed for an audience of museum profession­als who are attending the American Alliance of Museums Conference in Denver this week, said museum spokespers­on Chris Patrello.

“It’s the culminatio­n of many years of work with community partners to determine the best way forward,” he said. “So it’s the product of that process.”

Colorado has been viewed as a national leader in returning Indigenous artifacts under a Congressio­nal law, passed in 1990, called the Native American Grave Protection and Repatriati­on Act. The Denver Museum of Nature and Science and the University of Colorado’s Museum of Natural History were two of the first institutio­ns in the country to repatriate their entire collection­s.

Institutio­ns in the state, including federal agencies with offices here, have made available 95.6% of the more than 5,000 Native American remains they had possessed — double the national rate, The Denver Post has reported.

The Museum of Nature and Science’s existing North American Indian Cultures Hall is advertised as a way to “experience the incredible diversity among Native American groups and the practicali­ty and artistry of their everyday objects,” according to the museum’s website. “As you travel through the various regions you can explore authentic reconstruc­ted dwellings, including an Inuit snow house, a Northwest Coast clan house, a Navajo hogan, and a Cheyenne tipi. Along the way, examine beautifull­y crafted weavings, basketry, beadwork and pottery.”

The exhibition’s replacemen­t will note the explicit involvemen­t of Indigenous people, Davis promised.

“We will reimagine exhibition curation, collecting, programmin­g and conservati­on practices with respect to Indigenous culture, heritage and belongings,” she said. “We recognize that there is more work to be done, and we are committed to working with, and for, community members as we move forward in reimaginin­g our practices.”

But there’s no timeline for reopening the space, Patrello said.

The museum is inviting visitors to share their views using a scannable QR code located on the statement and on the museum’s website, dmns.org.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States