Donald Ellis Gallery, a New York-based dealer of Native American art, will show Native American drawings and other artworks in the Frieze Viewing Room, opening tomorrow. This online exhibition will offer art fair visitors a window into the fantastic native artistic traditions of the United States and Canada.
Of the 36 items to appear in the gallery’s exhibit, 27 are drawings. Dating from 1800 through the 1960s, they come from nations in western Canada, Alaska, the Plains, and the American Southwest. These brightly-colored drawings depict people, animals, and cultural events in a variety of styles. However, offerings will also include three-dimensional objects such as a Haida shaman’s rattle and Tsimshian chest.
The gallery emphasizes the great importance of Native American drawings, which served as permanent records in cultures without written traditions. The accompanying texts stress the sophistication and the diversity of these drawings, while pointing out the differences between Native American and Euro-American ideas about the art form.
Ledger Drawings
The biggest portion of the exhibition contains Ledger Drawings from Great Plains cultures such as the Cheyenne and Crow. Ledger Drawings record cultural history, such as battles and ceremonies, on pages from European ledger books. This tradition was not commercial when it began in the 1870s, but it quickly gained a market among non-native American collectors. One particularly noteworthy example will also appear in a special Forever exhibition curated from different Frieze Viewing Room displays.
Frieze Viewing Room
The Frieze Viewing Room is the online stand-in for this year’s Frieze Masters and Frieze London fairs. It will be live from October 9-16, 2020 and will feature displays from more than 250 galleries. Visit the Frieze website to learn more and create an account to access the Viewing Room.
Click and follow us on Google News to stay updated all the time
We love art history and writing about it. Your support helps us to sustain DailyArt Magazine and keep it running.
DailyArt Magazine needs your support. Every contribution, however big or small, is very valuable for our future. Thanks to it, we will be able to sustain and grow the Magazine. Thank you for your help!
Vienna in Austria is currently the unlikely location of a David and Goliath battle, where the small (but perfectly formed) Leopold museum is taking on the global social media giant, Meta.