Season 6

This episode features an interview with Sháńdíín Brown (Diné), continuing our series talking to participants in the Momus residency “Estuaries: An International Indigenous Art Criticism Residency” co-hosted with Forge Project. Lauren Wetmore talks to Sháńdíín Brown, a citizen of the Navajo Nation and the first Henry Luce Curatorial Fellow for Native American Art at Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) Museum, about two very different texts written almost a century apart: Laura Tohe’s “There is No Word for Feminism in My Language” (2000) and Uriah S. Hollister’s “The Navajo and His Blanket” (1903). Brown speaks about these two texts in the context of the exhibition she has curated Diné Textiles: Nizhónígo Hadadít’eh (They Are Beautifully Dressed), which opens in early September at the RISD Museum. In highlighting the important role of women in Navajo culture, and Brown’s own work as a facilitator of that culture, she speaks against racist writing about Indigenous art: “When someone so boldly says ‘the Navajos are going to go extinct,'” Brown says of Hollister’s text, “you’re like, me being here, having Native people in museums, having Native people invited to be collaborators, and working in art history is a big deal.”

Diné Textiles: Nizhónígo Hadadít’eh (They Are Beautifully Dressed) curated by Sháńdíín Brown, will be on view at the RISD Museum from September 2, 2023 to September 29, 2024.

This episode is supported by Gulf Coast Magazine’s Toni Beauchamp Critical Art Writing Prize, and The Mellon Foundation.

Momus: The Podcast is edited by Jacob Irish, with production assistance from Chris Andrews.

 

About the Guest

About the Guest, and more

  • Sháńdíín Brown (Diné) is a curator, creative, and citizen of the Navajo Nation from Arizona. She is the first Henry Luce Curatorial Fellow for Native American Art at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) Museum. She co-curated Being and Believing in the Natural World, which is currently on view at the RISD Museum. Brown is also adjunct faculty in the Apparel Design department at RISD. Her forthcoming exhibition at the RISD Museum for fall 2023 explores Diné textiles and fashion. Brown’s research interests include Indigenous fashion, jewelry, art and feminism. She is a graduate of Dartmouth College, where she earned her BA in Anthropology as well as Native American Studies and minored in Environmental Studies. Previously she has held positions at the Heard Museum, Hood Museum of Art, Penn Museum, Institute of American Indian Arts, Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, School for Advanced Research, and Indian Arts Research Center. Her jewelry can be viewed on Instagram @T.Begay.Designs.

More by the Guest

Estuaries: An International Indigenous Art Criticism Residency

May 15June 4, 2023
Led by Dr. Léuli Eshrāghi and Candice Hopkins, and faculty members Sarah Biscarra Dilley, Dr. Cathy Mattes, Dr. Maia Nuku, Pablo José Ramírez, Dr. Jolene Rickard, Megan Tamati-Quennell, and River Whittle.

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