Hustling and Hoaxing: Institutions, Modern Styles, and Yeffe Kimball’s “Native” Art

IF 1.2 Q1 HISTORY
Sarah Anne Stolte
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Abstract

This article considers the artistic career of self-identified Osage painter Yeffe Kimball (1906–1978). Following the stylistic trends of modern American Indian painting as largely defined by non-Native critics and a male-dominated art world, Kimball’s works were accepted into major exhibits. How Kimball was able to “pass” as an American Indian artist is the core of a larger narrative—one that demonstrates and provokes critique of how her fraud took advantage of, but also contributed to strengthening, an exclusionary, devaluative settler-colonial dynamic of expropriation that continues into the present. This article critiques the manner in which museums and art schools defined societal values of “Indianness” that marginalized Native artists. Examining Yeffe Kimball’s successful ethnic fraud affirms a patriarchal, assimilationist narrative and the extent to which European-American identities, institutions, and art practices control American Indian imagery.
喧嚣与哄骗:制度、现代风格与叶菲·金博尔的“本土”艺术
本文考察了奥萨奇画家耶菲·金博尔(1906-1978)的艺术生涯。按照现代美国印第安人绘画的风格趋势(主要由非本土评论家和男性主导的艺术世界定义),金博尔的作品被纳入了主要展览。金博尔是如何“通过”成为一名美国印第安人艺术家的,这是一个更大叙事的核心——这一叙事展示并引发了对她的欺诈行为如何利用,但也有助于加强一种排斥性、贬值性的定居者殖民地征用动态的批评,这种征用动态一直持续到现在。这篇文章批评了博物馆和艺术学校定义“印第安人”社会价值观的方式,这些价值观将土著艺术家边缘化。审视Yeffe Kimball成功的种族欺诈,肯定了父权制、同化主义的叙事,以及欧美身份、制度和艺术实践对美国印第安人形象的控制程度。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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