Natalie Ball: bilwi naats Ga’niipci

2023

This work consist of cotton, elk rawhide, wood, synthetic fabric, leather, artificial hair, safety pins, metal clamps, glass beads, plastic beads, metal, shells, rope, makeup, and graphite suspended in the air with clamps hoovering over wooden planks.

Natalie Ball: Dwaa neepga [what’s happening?], my name is Natalie Ball. My work always calls back to narrative, and my work always calls back to community, to ancestors, to right now, and identity.

To claim my Blackness doesn't disqualify me or water down how Indian I am even though it does when you're thinking about blood quantum and blood politics that are used to self determine who we are as a tribe or a nation or as a people. So I'm using that, “we smell like the outside,” of colloquialism to push back against this really static idea of Indian. 

My idea for materials in my studio was always to deconstruct it, to make new meaning from it. To choose materials that are charged with meaning, to choose materials  that are strong markers for Indian. That say Indian really loud. What's more Indian than a ribbon skirt? What's more Indian than a star quilt? That's where the work really starts at. And the narrative informs the materials. 

Narrator: One work where Ball literally stitches historical narratives into carefully chosen materials is the plywood-mounted work with a paper quilt, which is on the north gallery wall, to the right after you enter. 

Natalie Ball: I've been sitting on these Modoc War newspapers or these newspapers that cover the Modoc War from 1872 to 1873. I've been sitting on those for a while. I am Modoc and those materials, I just never knew what to do with them and now I do. I've been collecting quotes from my auntie, top quilts from my auntie, she's passed now. This is the last one that I have of hers. And I just feel like you can't think about quilting without thinking about Black history in America.

Narrator: Like the quilts, the hanging works collage different objects together to complicate their meanings. Ball describes the animal hides in particular as continuations of the idea brought forth by the exhibition’s title, which in maqlaqsyals—the Klamath peoples’ language—is “bilwi naats Ga’niipci.”

Natalie Ball: So I started this work last year thinking through the animals that come from the outside that come home into the inside of my home. 

The community home here where I'm from, in Chiloquin, Oregon. It's a Native American community. It's my tribal community. So when your deer elk is hunted, it comes home gutted, it hangs and it cures a while and it's hung from its hind legs onto a pole that extends from a rope to the ceiling or some sort of bar usually in your garage where it cures for a few amount of days and it's covered with fabric and it hangs there.

I think this idea of Pan-Indianism, I think this idea of my Blackness being a way to disqualify me from belonging in these spaces, and to exist in this space of being othered in the Indian community is where the beauty of the work lies. I think the really fun part about this and the really beautiful thing about being who I am is knowing that belonging looks really different in both communities. I can honestly say that I'm free in this space to make this kind of work, that's critical. So when I'm thinking through this idea of belonging through the work, it allows me to be free with my materials as well. 

Usually you don't rip up your auntie's blanket who's passed. You don't rip up a baby blanket that was given to your son, through community. But I do because I just feel like everything's sacred in here and nothing is sacred in here. Everything can be deconstructed here to make meaning that I feel is really important because it holds a certain kind of space that needs to be held not only for me and my babies, but also for those that are coming, that hold the same kind of space that I do.


Installation view of Baby Board by Natalie Ball, 2023

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