Raven Halfmoon: Flags of Our Mothers
Raven Halfmoon: Flags of Our Mothers features new and recent works made over the last five years. Commissioned by The Aldrich and Bemis Center, the exhibition debuts Halfmoon鈥檚 largest works to date, including Flagbearer, a three-part stacked ceramic sculpture standing over twelve-feet tall.
Halfmoon鈥檚 practice ranges from torso-scaled to colossal-sized glazed stoneware sculptures. Several of her recent works soar up to nine-feet high and weigh over a thousand pounds. Their enormous scale and visual power oppose existing stereotypes and biases, creating new monuments that honor the artist鈥檚 Caddo ancestors and traditions, including her elders who taught her ceramic techniques when she was a teenager.
Halfmoon鈥檚 inspirations orbit centuries鈥攆rom ancient Indigenous pottery, specifically Caddo pottery traditions, to the colossal Olmec stone heads in Mexico, the Moai statues on Easter Island and the major earth mounds constructed by the artist鈥檚 ancestors for a variety of purposes, including ceremonial. Fusing Caddo pottery traditions, a history of making mostly done by women, with populist gestures鈥攐ften tagging her work (a reference also to Caddo tattooing and ancient pottery motifs), her works reference stories of the Caddo Nation, specifically her feminist lineage and the power of its complexities.
Halfmoon works mainly in portraiture, building each work by hand using the coil method. Her surfaces are expressive and show deep finger impressions and dramatic dripping glazes鈥攁 physicality that presences her as both maker and matter. Her palette is specific and matches both the clay bodies she selects and the glazes she fires with: reds, after the Oklahoma soil and the blood of murdered Indigenous women; blacks, which reference the natural clay native to the Red River; and buff creams. Sometimes she stacks and repeats imagery, creating totemic forms that represent herself and her maternal ancestry while also referencing the multiplicities that exist inside all of us.
The title of the exhibition, Flags of Our Mothers, is a tribute to the matriarchs in her life and all the Indigenous women, who over many centuries have created and endured, keeping their stories and traditions present, active and alive.
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Raven Halfmoon: Flags of Our Mothers features new and recent works made over the last five years. Commissioned by The Aldrich and Bemis Center, the exhibition debuts Halfmoon鈥檚 largest works to date, including Flagbearer, a three-part stacked ceramic sculpture standing over twelve-feet tall.
Halfmoon鈥檚 practice ranges from torso-scaled to colossal-sized glazed stoneware sculptures. Several of her recent works soar up to nine-feet high and weigh over a thousand pounds. Their enormous scale and visual power oppose existing stereotypes and biases, creating new monuments that honor the artist鈥檚 Caddo ancestors and traditions, including her elders who taught her ceramic techniques when she was a teenager.
Halfmoon鈥檚 inspirations orbit centuries鈥攆rom ancient Indigenous pottery, specifically Caddo pottery traditions, to the colossal Olmec stone heads in Mexico, the Moai statues on Easter Island and the major earth mounds constructed by the artist鈥檚 ancestors for a variety of purposes, including ceremonial. Fusing Caddo pottery traditions, a history of making mostly done by women, with populist gestures鈥攐ften tagging her work (a reference also to Caddo tattooing and ancient pottery motifs), her works reference stories of the Caddo Nation, specifically her feminist lineage and the power of its complexities.
Halfmoon works mainly in portraiture, building each work by hand using the coil method. Her surfaces are expressive and show deep finger impressions and dramatic dripping glazes鈥攁 physicality that presences her as both maker and matter. Her palette is specific and matches both the clay bodies she selects and the glazes she fires with: reds, after the Oklahoma soil and the blood of murdered Indigenous women; blacks, which reference the natural clay native to the Red River; and buff creams. Sometimes she stacks and repeats imagery, creating totemic forms that represent herself and her maternal ancestry while also referencing the multiplicities that exist inside all of us.
The title of the exhibition, Flags of Our Mothers, is a tribute to the matriarchs in her life and all the Indigenous women, who over many centuries have created and endured, keeping their stories and traditions present, active and alive.
Artists on show
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Ogden Museum of Southern Art will present Raven Halfmoon: Flags of Our Mothers, a major traveling exhibition showcasing the work ceramicist Raven Halfmoon (Caddo Nation).