JL: I bet with
time, it will pick up other meanings as well.
How long ago was the one in Wyoming made?
EHB: About a thousand years
ago. I went up there with my sons - and we smoked our pipes and
made our prayers right up there too. People go up there and fast
and make their offerings and prayers. Tribal members go up there
and live
there for a few days - so it has a lot of function - it's a great place
- a very powerful place.
JL: What
is the significance of the upside down American flag?
EHB: That whole part
of the tree was about the American Indian Movement (AIM) - that's their symbol
- it's America in distress. They also use that as an international
distress signal - if you take the flag of your nation and you turn it
upside down. It's a great symbol and America is in distress, obviously
- and it still is. I like putting that up there.
That tree also has a lot of
things about the international treaty council and about the AIM
movement's international council - they went out and met a lot of tribal
people in communities and made alliances. There are actually two
sides of the tree; on the thinner side is the design from Australia
where I worked with an Australian artist in the Bush and then the
other side is actually from Zimbabwe where I had been working with artists from South Africa. I have been doing that myself -
bridging between these continents and collaborating. I just finished a
project in Java - in Indonesia this summer. I am going to Italy on
Wednesday; there is a big meeting with the National Museum of the
American Indian about the Venice Biennale. There's a couple of
things happening.
I don't really do Venice
Biennale or those kinds of festivals; I am really more involved with
just meeting artists and living out in the Bush and making work with
them.
JL: The piece you did in the
early 90s - Building Minnesota; it is also an outdoor sculpture project
. How did you get to build that piece?
EHB: Well, it
was a solo exhibit opportunity that they gave me at the Walker Art
Center and I usually do things in indoors and outdoors and I am also
kind of sensitive about the classist nature of museums - the elitist.
Most folks won't go to one - no matter what you do - working class
people or colored people - they won't go. So I went out to make
something for people outdoors too - and of course that could deal with
issues of genocide from the Minnesota history. It is also in a
sense like a wheel - I think it is an honoring piece too - it honors
fallen travel members. It is a memorial; it kind of educated the world
about Abraham Lincoln's viciousness, but also it was a memorial for the
ones that were killed. They left offerings, they tied feathers.
There were descendants living in Minneapolis that would come there and
make their offerings in memory of their relatives.
The detail about
that is that we've been negotiating and working for ten years with the
Walker Art Center - and they just now tried to kick the whole thing back
to me and it is coming in about two weeks - back to my studio.
They won't show it in Minneapolis - the Walker will never put it out -
nobody in Minneapolis wanted it. I went to all kinds of
institutions and I've been to all kinds of meetings - I worked for
ten years off and on on this mess - the Walker said they would try storing it; they were gracious enough - but they would
never put it out on their own (on their sculpture garden or on all of that
property). It is too hot of a topic.
JL: You think that it
is too tough for them to deal with because you're putting it right in
their faces?
EHB: And it's not something
about Bosnia, or Tiananmen Square, that stuff will fly easily; but genocide
in Minneapolis, Minnesota - it doesn't fly so easy.
JL: That's what I
loved so much about the piece. When I saw the images - I thought
this was so amazing. In history books - in England or in the US
- you don't read about any of this stuff.
EHB: You know when I talk about that piece in lectures
at universities around the country - rarely does anyone know about it.
JL: It was 38 that
were hanged.
EHB: Then Johnson hung
two more so there were 40 altogether. They call it the Dakota
Uprising; they did attack a store house and did kill a store house
manager that had the food that was being withheld from the tribes.
They were supposed to feed the tribes. There was a war that
happened - a small war - because they revolted against the government and
tried to take things into their own hands. There was retribution -
they surrendered and everything and there was a truce.
JL: What it brings to
mind is tree No. 8 - the one with Leonard Peltier's number on it - can
you tell me about this?
EHB: That is Leonard's
number at Levenworth. It is about supporting him and that legacy
of the AIM movement and insurgency that is necessary in America to make
any progress. We need to have somebody with some rebuttal to
what's happened in this country. And so Peltier is suffering for
all that right now. He is also an artist - we had a show together in
Boston. We had a show where we had a benefit for his defense fund; he sent some work out and we exhibited it together.
He has that book My Life is
My Sun Dance; so I put on top of that tree the sun, and it said Free -
free the sun and that was underneath it - so it was all about Freeing the
Sun.
JL: There are also five birds and underneath that
there is a spiral and then - respect all nations sovereign.
EHB: That is my
Cheyenne last name - which is mini magpies - the first translation of
heap of birds was mini magpies - and in Cheyenne our name is magpie
birds - many of them together - so I've included those birds as my last
name - and those birds were actually done in Fort Marion in prison -
they were small drawing of one of the prisoners of war in in 1870 in
Florida - and multiplied it. Another prisoner - and then Peltier
prisoner too - and then my name.
JL: How has the public
reacted to this piece? - looking at it and reading what's on it -
its a tough piece.
EHB: There's a lot of
details and a lot of history. But it's been pretty favorable.
There's been some static about the flag being down, but I think it has
done pretty well. I'm looking forward for it to get more national
and international exposure - it needs that, but Denver isn't the
crossroads of the art world necessarily, it's an important museum, but
it's not New York - it would be different.
JL: Well that's what
came to my mind. Imagine if this were in Central Park - a piece
like that would be incredible.
EHB: I am interested
in doing more public art that deals with other native histories around
the country. I just finished coming back from Vancouver - I'm
doing a piece at the University of British Columbia; we are putting out
these signs with Native Host - those with the state backwards - like New
York backwards state of host is Shinnecock or NY host is Mohawk. I
had a series of those in NYC. But these are all British Columbia
tribes so British Columbia is backwards so native host is Squamish or
Cree or .... So I am giving them to the University of British
Columbia and we are putting them all over the campus. It deals
more topically with the tribes from that part of Canada. I am
interested in doing more of that work - it is more appropriate to history
that is regional.
JL: Is most of your
work outdoor installations?
EHB: I do a lot of
studio work also - I am doing mono prints too - I am in love with all kinds
of art practice. The most noteworthy - in terms of the public - is
probably the public art because that gets all of the press. But,
the piece that I did in Indonesia was more personal words - I worked
with some art students and they interpreted my own words in their
Indonesian text and wrote it with their own language back and forth - so
we do all kinds of different sorts of sharing. And sometimes I just do
my own kind of diary - my own kinds of whimsy - I just write that stuff
out. So I am busy with all kinds of different attitudes - I guess
- with art. And I am working on some paintings as well.
JL: Going back to your
"Wheel" piece. The branch shape
(Y shape) is that from a tree shape?
EHB: Yes, and
it's a support. Actually in the earth renewal lodge you first have
those sticks standing up by themselves - and they are waiting to accept
the rafters - to hold up the ceiling and stuff. And the metaphor
to me is that it is a huge support system - that's what my sculpture is
for the native people.