EventsMezinibii'igejig Wenjibaawaad Odaawaa Zaaga'iganiing: Artists Who Come From Lac Courte Oreilles Art Reception

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Mezinibii'igejig Wenjibaawaad Odaawaa Zaaga'iganiing: Artists Who Come From Lac Courte Oreilles Art Reception

1:00 PM – 3:00 PM
Minneapolis Central

Description

Please join the Lac Courte Oreilles Artist Collective and Hennepin County Library for an art reception for Mezinibii'igejig Wenjibaawaad Odaawaa Zaaga'iganiing: Artists Who Come From Lac Courte Oreilles.

The exhibit is on view October 6-November 27, on the second floor of Minneapolis Central Library.

The images in this exhibit represent clan relationships and stories of the Lac Courte Oreilles people, one band of the Ojibwe nation, who reside throughout the Great Lakes and Atlantic Coast. With a focus on the Woodlands style, artists create visual representations of Ojibwe cultural knowledge.

Featuring artists: James Autio, Sylvia Bracklin, Nicole Carley, Gordon Coons, Tim Coons, Cynthia Kirk, Jerry Kirk, Kelly Martinson, Ramona Morrow, George Perry, Cleo White and Dennis White.

The Lac Courte Oreilles (LCO) people are one band of the large Ojibwe Nation that originally occupied the upper eastern woodlands area of the North American continent. The Treaty of 1854 established the Lac Courte Oreilles reservation on land that is a part of the vast territory the Lac Courte Oreilles people had occupied for hundreds of years. The land is covered in forests and lakes contributing to the style of art seen in this exhibit, known as Woodlands Art.

The Ojibwe Woodlands Art style is created from the combination of Ojibwe petroglyphs (drawings or carvings on rocks) and images from birch bark scrolls. The images can also be identified as X-ray vision. The artist usually paints images with a heavy black outline and paints what is felt or perceived inside animals or people. What is painted inside represents a kind of spirit, a source of powers.

Norval Morrisseau, an Ojibwe Canadian artist from the Bingwi Neyaashi Anishinaabek First Nation, is the founder of the Woodlands Art style. He learned about his Ojibwe culture through his grandparents and Ojibwe community while a child, and as a young man gathered oral histories from his community. He developed the Woodlands Art style by using painting as an extension and visual representation of this knowledge.

Funded by Friends of the Hennepin County Library

Suitable for:
Seniors
Adults
Teens
Kids
All Ages
Type:
Arts and Crafts
Language:
English

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