WWD Digital Daily

Prada’s ‘ Possible Conversati­ons’ Series Tapped Into Indigenous Experience­s With Water

The recurring series addresses sustainabi­lity topics in a fresh lens.

- BY KALEY ROSHITSH

For Patricia Marroquin Norby — the associate curator of Native American art at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art — water is personal.

And it's also highly politicize­d, as her experience as a Native-born American and Indigenous researcher whose curatorial approach is inspired by the original keepers of the land and water, would show.

“Water politics in the Southwest is about who has power,” she said. Marroquin Norby was one of two speakers in Prada's recurring “Possible Conversati­ons” series, which also counted Kate Orff, founding principal and partner at SCAPE landscape architectu­re firm. The latest session was called “Shaping Water” and was held at the Prada store in SoHo Tuesday night.

As fashion, in some cases, is prioritizi­ng the importance of Indigenous knowledge, Marroquin Norby offered a timely take as it relates to building acceptance in the art world, which fashion can learn from. Furthermor­e, sustainabl­e solutions exist within Indigenous communitie­s. She said her role is to create a “welcoming space” for Native Peoples at the Met, bringing in the contempora­ry works of Shinnecock

Nation artist and filmmaker Courtney M. Leonard, Chemehuevi photograph­er Cara Romero, Ho-Chunk photograph­er Tom Jones, among others.

“There's no way my work wouldn't include the Native People's [perspectiv­es],” she reiterated. Along with advocating for an “active land and water statement” in the Met (or an acknowledg­ment of past wrongdoing­s that pays homage to the original keepers of the land), she gave the audience Native nuance for contextual­izing the work of famous painters such as Georgia O'Keeffe.

For one, she argued, O'Keeffe's paintings are more “politicall­y charged” than portrayed, because of how O'Keeffe urged for her own inheritanc­e over existing inhabitant­s' connection to the land. Essentiall­y, she painted New Mexico's Pedernal Mountain so often, that she was quoted as owning it in a popular quote: “God told me if I painted that mountain enough, I could have it.” Marroquin Norby said this was a way to “visually [appropriat­e]” the landscape.

Overall, the audience walked away with fresh dialogue and new appreciati­on for Indigenous knowledge as it relates to solving complex problems like water scarcity as well as the more aesthetic meanings therein.

These nuanced learnings and more were showcased, as Prada's Possible

Conversati­ons aims to shed light on intersecti­ons in sustainabi­lity, art, fashion and design. The session trailed a naturethem­ed talk held in September called “Thinking Forests,” that similarly saw a packed room in Prada's wooden epicenter stage in its SoHo store.

 ?? ?? Prada's ‘Possible Conversati­ons' ‘Shaping Water' explores what ifs in sustainabi­lity. Here, a past conference, “Shaping Society.”
Prada's ‘Possible Conversati­ons' ‘Shaping Water' explores what ifs in sustainabi­lity. Here, a past conference, “Shaping Society.”

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