Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

A view of a teepee from the bottom that is colorful with intersecting strings creating a starburst pattern.

Cannupa Hanska Luger: My name is Cannupa Hanska Luger. I am Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara, and Lakota an enrolled member of the Three Affiliated Tribes of Fort Berthold. 

What you physically see is a tipi full-sized constructed out of crinoline, which is a mesh material. So it has a transparent kind of aesthetic to it. The skin surface is a hot pink and a black. It has trim and structural components that are made out of nylon ribbon. I was thinking about: what is the primary purpose of a tipi?

Narrator: One thing about the tipi that especially interested Luger was its conical shape. He was also drawn to its use across many Native cultures, but specifically those from the Great Plains region of North America. Luger connected the tipi’s geometry to theoretical models from physics, especially early theories of relativity. This model is illustrated by two stacked cones, the lower of which represents the past, the top the future. 

Cannupa Hanska Luger: It's often times described as a lens that recognizes the entire universe and the place that we stand being the same. It's also representative of the dresses that were worn. So you had to humble yourself when you entered the tipi and you had to humble yourself when you left the tipi and entered the world. It was like a small rebirth or a recognition of matrilineal power and, to prostrate yourself when you enter into the home and recognize that you don't need to be extra big, but also to do that when you exit as a reminder of your birth and that the world is new every time. So these are things that are embedded in the physicality of the tipi. 

Narrator: Luger is also aware that cultural institutions have long been the keepers of stolen Indigenous artworks and belongings. 

Cannupa Hanska Luger: Presenting the tipi in a way that you cannot access. It is a part of that conversation. Especially at an institutional level, there is an inherent entitlement to access in ways that we don't all have the capacity to truly engage with that. So as an artist, I'm like, look, how do you present this work? Share that knowledge but not slip into providing total access. And so presenting it with this crinoline material, it allows you to see into that space but never actually physically be inside of it. 


Cannupa Hanska Luger, Uŋziwoslal Wašičuta (from the series Future Ancestral Technologies), 2021– (installation view, Amarillo Museum of Art, Texas, 2022). Crinoline, steel, ribbon, nylon, cord, hand-dyed wool felt, fiberglass rod, 360 × 156 × 156 in. (910 × 1300 × 1300 cm). © Cannupa Hanska Luger. Courtesy the artist and Amarillo Museum of Art; photograph by Shannon Richardson

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