Natalie Ball: bilwi naats Ga’niipci

2023

Modern art installation with colorful fabrics hanging from a wooden structure suspended by ropes in a white gallery space.

Narrator: This is ribbon skirt There’s Indian and then there’s Indian., from 2023 by Natalie Ball. 

Natalie Ball: So you're looking at a hanging sculpture that hangs from the wall by a white rope that's tied onto a horizontal pole. And from that horizontal pole is a draped and dried elk hide that's cut into a star pattern at the top. But from that hangs a textile piece. So the textile, the star quilt is cut out and only the star remains, and the star quilt is hanging from the elk hides by three clamps. My Aunt Peggy chose the colors. They're very much Christmas colors. I know she loved Christmas and I love that about her. But the colors are tones of green, olive, evergreen even, and reds. 

Narrator: Star quilts have particular significance to many Indigenous North American communities, and feature imagery of a many-pointed star prominently in their design. Two multicolored stars of this quilt have been cut out and layered on top of one another, such that a few inches of one star on the bottom expand past the borders of the star on top. The bottom points of the stars have also been cut off; only one point on the top and one point on either side remain. Large blue spring clamps hold the points of the tops of the stars to the edges of the elk hide. 

Natalie Ball: And the cutout part of the star quilt, the edging, the edges are folded and nested towards the bottom of the hanging sculpture. And what gives that part form and shape are quilted Modoc newspapers that are on the Modoc War. So the star quilt is halved and folded. And then from that are the ribbons. And there's 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 ribbons that are pinned horizontally to that star quilt. Top to bottom is a dark red, a red, orange, yellow, white, and a royal blue.

Narrator: The ribbons are made of smooth, shiny satin. The edges of the star are connected with two gray three-strand braids made of elk hide; these braids extend outward in a semicircle shape. The vibrant color of the bottom half of the hanging sculpture contrasts strongly with the cream-colored elk hide on the top. 


Installation view of Natalie Ball: bilwi naats Ga’niipci (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, November 17, 2023 – February 19, 2024). ribbon skirt There’s Indian and then there’s Indian., 2023. Photograph by Ron Amstutz

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