The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts

  • About
    • Mission
    • History
    • People
    • Contact
    • FAQ
  • News
    • All
    • Foundation
    • Grantees
  • Grants
    • Overview
    • Application Guidelines
      • Curatorial Research Fellowships
      • Exhibition Support
      • Multi-year Program Support
      • FAQ
    • Grantees
    • Regional Regranting
    • Special Initiatives
  • Warhol
    • Biography
    • Catalogues Raisonnés
      • Paintings, Sculptures, and Drawings
        • Owner Questionnaire
      • Prints
      • Films
    • Licensing
      • Licensing Inquiries
    • Sales
      • Andy Warhol: Social Network
    • Andy Warhol Museum
    • Stanford Photo Archive
    • Photographic Legacy Project

Preoccupied: Indigenizing the Museum

Institution
Baltimore Museum of Art
Grant Cycle
Spring 2023
Amount
$100,000
Type of Grant
Exhibition Support
Website
artbma.org/learn/preoccupied-indigenizing-the-museum/ ↗
Caroline Monnet, River Flows Through Bent Trees, 2024. Installation view. Photo by Mitro hood.
Dana Claxton, Spark, 2024. Installation view. Photo by Mitro Hood.
Dana Claxton, Lasso, 2018. LED firebox with transmounted chromogenic transparency, 72 x 120 inches. Painted buffalo skull by Kim Soo Good track.
Dyania White Hawk, Bodies of Water, 2024. Installation view. Photo by Mitro Hood.
Enduring Buffalo: Saddle Bag, late 19th - early 20th century (left). Buffalo hide, wool cloth, beads, dye, 76 x 13 1/4 x 1 in. Long Soldier (Húnkpapȟa Lakȟóta), 20th Century (right). Pigment on canvas, 26 1/4 x 67 1/8 in.
Finding Home, 2024. Installation view. Photo by Mitro Hood.
Illustrating Agency, 2024. Installation view. Photo by Mitro Hood.
James Luna, End of the Frail, 1993. Mixed media, 31 3/4 x 42 inches.
Laura Ortman, My Soul Remainer, 2017.
Nicholas Galanin, We Dreamt Deaf, 2015. Taxidermied polar bear, polar rug, 42 x 80 x 120 inches.

At the center of Preoccupied: Indigenizing the Museum, a major initiative by the Baltimore Museum of Art, are artwork, perspectives, and histories of Native artists, scholars, and community members. The wide-reaching project seeks to begin addressing the historical erasure of Indigenous culture by arts institutions while creating new practices for museums.

The expansive Preoccupied project extends into the galleries and beyond with public programs, nine exhibitions, staff training, and new interpretive texts for artworks throughout the Museum. The curatorial team worked closely with Native artists, curators, and Baltimore-region residents on a community advisory panel to frame the questions this project would ask. In the earliest stages of the initiative, all Preoccupied project participants were invited to an “unconference,” a weekend-long retreat with the exhibitions’ curators, where they discussed Native visibility in the face of colonial oppression.

Preoccupied emphasizes that Native people have created meaningful art since time immemorial and that Native communities thrive to this day. Beyond its large-scale exhibition program, the BMA’s celebration of Native art and artists offers a framework that the Museum can carry forward for future exhibitions and community engagement.

“The Warhol Foundation aims to support the full range of artistic activity in America—from exhibitions at major museums to neighborhood projects by artist collectives. Arts writers, through the range and specialization of their individual interests, touch upon all of this activity—illuminating and interrogating it and bringing it into conversation with the public. Support for artists is not complete without support for the circulation and serious consideration of their ideas. The Arts Writers Grant program keeps artists at the center of cultural dialogue and debate—in our opinion, right where they belong.”

Joel Wachs, President

The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Newsletter

Andy Warhol and Andy Warhol’s signature is a registered trademark of The Andy Warhol Foundation.
All Andy Warhol artwork © The Andy Warhol Foundation.
Website design by Wkshps

Use High-Contrast Text