Coburn Gallery Trip featuring Rayna Hernandez

October 25, 2018

Coburn Gallery

Our class met with artist Rayna Hernandez (Yankton Sioux/Lakota) who graduated in 2016 with art and creative writing degrees at the University of South Dakota and is a former student of Professor Natanya Pulley. Her visit to the Colorado College was sponsored by the Fine Arts Center Mellon Faculty Fellowship and by the Provost’s Faculty Visiting Speaker Grant. Rayna had some of her artwork showcased in the Coburn Gallery in the Worner Campus Center. She did a presentation that explained her inspiration for her artwork and also talked about how one of her idols, Oscar Howe (http://aktalakota.stjo.org/site/News2?page=NewsArticle&id=8858), influences her art.

“Who ever said that my paintings are not in the traditional Indian style has poor knowledge of Indian art indeed. There is much more to Indian Art than pretty, stylized pictures. There was also power and strength and individualism (emotional and intellectual insight) in the old Indian paintings. Every bit in my paintings is a true and studied fact of Indian paintings. Are we to be held back forever with one phase of Indian painting, with no right for individualism, dictated to as the Indian always has been, put on reservations and treated like a child, and only the White Man knows what is best for him? Now even in art, “You little child do what we think is best for you, nothing different.” Well I am not going to stand for it. Indian Art can compete with any art in the world, but not as a suppressed Art. I see so much of the mismanagement and treatment of my people. It makes me cry inside to look at these poor people. My father died there about three years ago in a little shack, my two brothers still living there in shacks, never enough to eat, never enough clothing, treated as second class citizens. This is one of the reasons I have tried to keep the fine ways and culture of my forefathers alive. But one could easily turn to become a social protest painter. I only hope the Art World will not be one more contributor to holding us in chains.” ~Oscar Howe (Yanktonai Dakota; 1915-1983)

One of the main topics we have discussed in our class is how there are certain expectations that most people have for what they think Native/Indian art is and what it should be. We learned how many Native artists are not making their art to meet these expectations and how they are changing the idea of what Native art is and what Native art can be. Rayna shares her life experiences and identity in her artwork. She incorporates written work, beads, and other materials into her paintings.

Hernandez writes her ideas and experiences on anything she can find–napkins, receipts, scratch paper. Then she makes collages from those notes onto a canvas and paints over the top, creating and uneven and rugged background. “So my writing is incorporated in my paintings at least for my ideas and it’s also literally incorporated in the paintings.”…She paints abstract shapes over the written background of her work, leaving only a few words visible. She often adds a female form as the centerpiece–modeling many images after her own body.” (http://listen.sdpb.org/post/vermillion-artist-shares-life-experiences-and-identity-through-paintings)

Rayna and Professor Pulley have done a collaboration together which has been featured in the book “#NotYourPrincess Voices of Native American Women.” Professor Pulley had written “Falling” and had asked Rayna to do an art piece, “Morning Star,” to accompany it. It was a pleasure to meet Rayna and to have been inspired by her artwork.

Natanya Ann Pulley and Rayna Hernandez with her “Morning Star” painting
“#NotYourPrincess Voices of Native American Women” Edited by Lisa Charleyboy and Mary Beth Leatherdale
“Falling” by Natanya Ann Pulley

Published by Zunneh-bah

Yá'át'ééh! Shí éí Zunneh-bah Martin yinishye. Tsénahabiłnii nishłį́, Naakai Nican Tlaca bashishchiin, Tábąąhá dashinalí, ał a Dine'é dashicheii. Tohłakai déé’ naashá. Ákót’éego éí asdzááni nishłį́. Colorado College di ííníshta’. Southwest Studies doo Film and Media Studies doo Indigenous Studies baa ííníshta’. Greetings! My name is Zunneh-bah Martin. My Diné (Navajo) clans are Sleeping Rock Clan, born for Mexican/Aztec/Mayan ancestry, my paternal grandpa is of the Edge Water Clan, and my late maternal grandpa is of the Modoc tribe. I am from Tohłakai, which is located near the New Mexico/Arizona border on the Navajo Reservation. I identify as an Indigenous/Native woman. I am a Senior here at the Colorado College. My major is Southwest Studies, my minor is Film and Media Studies, and I am looking to double minor in the new Indigenous Studies thematic minor. I am the current Vice President (former Co-Chair and Treasurer) of the CC Native American Student Union. I am also an FYE (First Year Experience) Mentor and Team Leader this year. For Block 3, I am taking "EN252 Topics in Native American Literature: Arts and Literature by Native American Writers and Artists."

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