Kent Monkman
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Kent Monkman (born 13 November 1965) is a Canadian First Nations artist of
Cree The Cree ( cr, néhinaw, script=Latn, , etc.; french: link=no, Cri) are a North American Indigenous people. They live primarily in Canada, where they form one of the country's largest First Nations. In Canada, over 350,000 people are Cree o ...
ancestry. He is a member of the Fisher River band situated in
Manitoba Manitoba ( ) is a Provinces and territories of Canada, province of Canada at the Centre of Canada, longitudinal centre of the country. It is Canada's Population of Canada by province and territory, fifth-most populous province, with a population o ...
's
Interlake Region The Interlake Region is an informal geographic region of the Canadian province of Manitoba that lies roughly between Lake Winnipeg and Lake Manitoba in the Canadian province of Manitoba. The region comprises 14 rural municipalities, one city (the ...
. He is both a visual as well as performance artist, working in a variety of media such as painting, film/video, and installation. In the early 2000s, Monkman developed his gender-fluid alter ego, Miss Chief Eagle Testickle, who has since appeared in many of his works. He has had many solo exhibitions at museums and galleries in Canada, the United States, and Europe. He has achieved international recognition for his colourful and richly detailed combining of disparate genre conventions, and for his recasting of historical narrative.


Biography

Monkman was born in St. Mary's, Ontario, Canada and raised primarily in
Winnipeg Winnipeg () is the capital and largest city of the province of Manitoba in Canada. It is centred on the confluence of the Red and Assiniboine rivers, near the longitudinal centre of North America. , Winnipeg had a city population of 749 ...
,
Manitoba Manitoba ( ) is a Provinces and territories of Canada, province of Canada at the Centre of Canada, longitudinal centre of the country. It is Canada's Population of Canada by province and territory, fifth-most populous province, with a population o ...
. He grew up in the middle- and upper-class neighbourhood of River Heights, where many people in the community did not welcome Monkman's father, Everet, because he was Cree. Monkman's interest in art developed at an early age. When he was in elementary school, he was one of two students selected to take free Saturday morning art classes at the Winnipeg Art Gallery. Having access to high-level art instruction as a youth proved to be a formative experience for Monkman. He later attended various Canadian and US institutions, including the
Banff Centre Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, formerly known as The Banff Centre (and previously The Banff Centre for Continuing Education), located in Banff, Alberta, was established in 1933 as the Banff School of Drama. It was granted full autonomy as ...
, the
Sundance Institute Sundance Institute is a non-profit organization founded by Robert Redford committed to the growth of independent artists. The institute is driven by its programs that discover and support independent filmmakers, theatre artists and composers fr ...
in
Los Angeles Los Angeles ( ; es, Los Ángeles, link=no , ), often referred to by its initials L.A., is the largest city in the state of California and the second most populous city in the United States after New York City, as well as one of the world ...
, and the Canadian Screen Training Institute. He graduated from Oakville's
Sheridan College Sheridan College Institute of Technology and Advanced Learning (formerly Sheridan College of Applied Arts and Technology) is a public polytechnic institute of technology located in the west- Greater Toronto Area in Ontario, Canada. Founded i ...
in 1986 (Canadian Art). Monkman lives and works in
Toronto Toronto ( ; or ) is the capital city of the Canadian province of Ontario. With a recorded population of 2,794,356 in 2021, it is the most populous city in Canada and the fourth most populous city in North America. The city is the anch ...
, Ontario. Monkman began his early career as a designer for
Native Earth Performing Arts Native Earth Performing Arts is a Canadian theatre company located in Toronto, Ontario. Founded in 1982, Native Earth is Canada's oldest professional Indigenous theatre company. Native Earth is dedicated to developing, producing and presenting pr ...
, the oldest professional Indigenous theatre company in Canada. He created sets and costumes for several productions, including ''Lady of Silences'' (1993) by Floyd Favel and ''Diva Ojibway'' (1994). In 2017, Monkman was presented th
Bonham Centre Award
from The Mark S. Bonham Centre for Sexual Diversity Studies,
University of Toronto The University of Toronto (UToronto or U of T) is a public research university in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, located on the grounds that surround Queen's Park. It was founded by royal charter in 1827 as King's College, the first institution ...
, for his contributions to the advancement and education of issues around sexual identification. He also accepted the honorary title of
grand marshal Grand marshal is a ceremonial, military, or political office of very high rank. The term has its origins with the word "marshal" with the first usage of the term "grand marshal" as a ceremonial title for certain religious orders. The following ...
for Toronto's Pride parade that year, citing the importance of Canada's 150th anniversary and raising awareness to his work. In response to Canada 150, curator of the
University of Toronto The University of Toronto (UToronto or U of T) is a public research university in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, located on the grounds that surround Queen's Park. It was founded by royal charter in 1827 as King's College, the first institution ...
art museum An art museum or art gallery is a building or space for the display of art, usually from the museum's own collection. It might be in public or private ownership and may be accessible to all or have restrictions in place. Although primarily co ...
, Barbara Fischer, commissioned Monkman's exhibit, "Shame and Prejudice: A Story of Resilience". The exhibit combines physical artefacts from museums and archives across Canada with his painting style that engages with colonialism, aiming to "set up a provocative friction between Canadian national myths, aboriginal experience and traditional European art practices." The exhibit sought to bring the Indigenous experience into the conversation, looking also at what Canada's 150 years meant for Indigenous people. In 2019, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York City, colloquially "the Met", is the largest art museum in the Americas. Its permanent collection contains over two million works, divided among 17 curatorial departments. The main building at 1000 ...
commissioned two paintings from Monkman for its Great Hall, entitled " mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People)." In 2020, the Met acquired the diptych, which consists of the paintings ''Welcoming the Newcomers'' (2019) and ''Resurgence of the People'' (2019). Monkman's project is explored in the book ''Revision and Resistance: mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People) at The Metropolitan Museum of Art'' (2020).


Art practice

Monkman's work "convey a deep understanding of oppression and the mechanisms at work in dominant ideology" by targeting modes of hierarchies and colonized sexuality within his artistic practice. Through his use of mimicry, Monkman subverts and de-centers the Western
Gaze In critical theory, sociology, and psychoanalysis, the gaze (French ''le regard''), in the philosophical and figurative sense, is an individual's (or a group's) awareness and perception of other individuals, other groups, or oneself. The concept ...
; he makes colonial audiences aware that "you've been looking at us utwe've also been looking at you". In his paintings and performances he appropriates classical 19th-century landscapes, speaking to the appropriation and assimilation of Indigenous culture by colonial settlers. He targets both the Indigenous communities and Euro-American communities affected by colonialism, generally playing with role reversal to do so. Some of the binary topics he tackles are "artist and model, colonial explorer and colonized subject, gazer and gazed upon, male and female, straight and queer, past and present, real and imaginary".


Use of colonizers' images

Monkman's work often references and reconfigures forms from 19th-century White American painters, particularly
George Catlin George Catlin (July 26, 1796 – December 23, 1872) was an American adventurer, lawyer, painter, author, and traveler, who specialized in portraits of Native Americans in the Old West. Traveling to the American West five times during the 18 ...
and the Western landscape painters. For example, his 2006 ''Trappers of Men'' takes an 1868 landscape by
Albert Bierstadt Albert Bierstadt (January 7, 1830 – February 18, 1902) was a German-American painter best known for his lavish, sweeping landscapes of the American West. He joined several journeys of the Westward Expansion to paint the scenes. He was not ...
, but portrays the scene at midday – rejecting Bierstadt's sunset original – and replaces Bierstadt's animals with perplexed white individuals from American art and political history, a Lakota historian, and Monkman's two-spirited alter-ego. Since Monkman uses the colonizers' own methodologies by use of language and imagery, "by choosing to speak, Monkman chooses to participate in using the Master's language, but his speech subverts rather than upholds the paradigm of oppression". "The artist uses close re-creation of earlier artworks as an opportunity for ironic, often humorous representation of historical attitudes towards First Nations culture, attitudes that persist today". He is criticized for using mimicry within his painting practise, this method of subversion requires him to still participate within an imperialist discourse as opposed to his performance practise which is considered to be more successful, but he "effect change on a systematic level, to change the signification of the language of oppression, even the minority artist must appeal to a mainstream audience". "Monkman's work might be considered controversial to some, especially in Alberta, where traditional images of the Old West are held near and dear to the heart, but Monkman hopes it helps Albertans see historic representations of colonization under a new light".


Style and method

Monkman adopts the
Old Master In art history, "Old Master" (or "old master")Old Masters De ...
s style of painting because he likes how the style expresses emotions like grief and longing through the body and facial expression. He was particularly moved by
Antonio Gisbert Antonio Gisbert Pérez (19 December 1834 – 27 November 1901) was a Spanish artist situated on the cusp between the realist and romantic movements in art. He was known for painting pictures of important events in a country's history in a re ...
's '' Execution of Torrijos and his Companions on the Beach at Málaga'' (1888). On a project beginning in 2017, Monkman and his team began working on a "protesters series" based on the Standing Rock protests where they combined photographs from the protest with classic battle scene paintings. His team then had models pose for a photo shoot to remake and capture the classic style with modern subject; these photographs were then projected on large canvas, traced and base-painted by assistants before Monkman did his finishing touches. ''Miss Chief's Wet Dream'' (2018), Monkman's first maritime-themed work and also his largest painting to date, is derived from two famous French Romantic paintings: '' The Raft of the Medusa'' (1818–19) by
Théodore Géricault Jean-Louis André Théodore Géricault (; 26 September 1791 – 26 January 1824) was a French Painting, painter and Lithography, lithographer, whose best-known painting is ''The Raft of the Medusa''. Although he died young, he was one of the pi ...
, and ''
Christ on the Sea of Galilee ''Christ Asleep during the Tempest'' is an oil on canvas painting by the French Romantic artist Eugène Delacroix, executed ''c.'' 1853. The painting is currently on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. Delacroix painted at ...
'' (1854) by
Eugène Delacroix Ferdinand Victor Eugène Delacroix ( , ; 26 April 1798 – 13 August 1863) was a French Romantic artist regarded from the outset of his career as the leader of the French Romantic school.Noon, Patrick, et al., ''Crossing the Channel: Britis ...
. With its varied and inclusive array of Indigenous warriors and European conquerors, ''Miss Chief's Wet Dream'' reminds us of the origins of our longest-running conflict—the relationship between Indigenous peoples in Canada and the country's colonizers.


''Hanky Panky''

Kent Monkman's painting '' Hanky Panky'' depicts the Prime Minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau, restrained and on all fours with his pants down as Monkman's alter ego, Miss Chief Eagle Testickle, approaches him from behind holding up a red sex toy in the shape of praying hands. Monkman generated controversy by suggesting that the rape scene was a consensual act, but later apologized for "any harm that was caused by the work". According to Monkman, the painting was intended to highlight flaws in "the Canadian (in)justice system" and the victimization of Indigenous women, who experience violence and sexual assault at disproportionately higher rates than other women in Canada. ''Hanky Panky'' was titled by Monkman to portray good humour as a reflection on the "nature of the character, the exuberant laughter of the Indigenous women and the trickery and deceit of each successive colonial government since Canadian Confederation." While some commentators focused on the controversy of depicting Trudeau as Monkman did, members of the Indigenous community offered critiques regarding the portrayal of sexual violence in the painting, specifically the notion that Indigenous women would participate and even enjoy the voyeuristic act of rape. Historically, "Indigenous women and girls in Canada are disproportionately affected by violence." Moreover, the way in which Monkman's work presents sexual violence incorrectly prioritizes the white-colonialist perspective, "fall ngin with a tradition of artists voicing the perspective of Indigenous groups that do not wholly belong to them."


Miss Chief Eagle Testickle

Miss Chief Eagle Testickle (previously Miss Chief ‘Share’ Eagle Testickle), is the two-spirit alter ego of Cree artist Kent Monkman, who Monkman includes in many of his paintings, drawings, sculptures, films, and performances. In Monkman's works, Miss Chief appears to be a fierce hunter, a talented artist, an activist, a masterful seducer, a brave hero, and a vibrant performer. Miss Chief is also depicted as a mythological time traveler, existing during the creation of the world itself, as well as in the “colonial spaces fthe past and present.”  She is featured in Monkman's parodies of 19th century romantic paintings, while also being included in works that show the lifestyles of contemporary Indigenous peoples in 21st-century Winnipeg. Miss Chief is often depicted with long hair and wearing drag-style make-up. She is frequently wearing platformed high heels and glitzy jockstraps, both of which often have traditional moccasin beading incorporated into them. The ‘Miss Chief’ part of her name is a play on the word ‘mischief’ to reflect Miss Chief's role as the ‘trickster’ in many of Monkman's works. The ‘Eagle Testickle’ part of the name purposely sounds like ‘egotistical’, to allude to “what Monkman sees as the egotism of 19th century uro-North Americanartists.” Originally, Miss Chief's name included ‘Share’ as reference to pop-culture icon
Cher Cher (; born Cherilyn Sarkisian; May 20, 1946) is an American singer, actress and television personality. Often referred to by the media as the Honorific nicknames in popular music, "Goddess of Pop", she has been described as embodying female ...
. When Monkman was creating Miss Chief, he claims he was inspired by Cher's Half-Breed 1973 song and music video, which features Cher singing about her Cherokee ancestry while wearing a glamorized traditional Indigenous chief's costume. As Penny Cousineau-Levine claims, by originally identifying with Cher, “Miss Chief foregrounds her ‘half-breed’ identity... ndin doing so, distances herself from the historically negative image...” associated with being half-White and half-Indigenous.   As Dayna Mcleod explains, through the gender-association conflict of the words ‘Miss’ and ‘Chief’, the inclusion of the word ‘Testickle’, and the use of ‘Eagle’, “Miss Chief's name speaks to (mis)representations of Indigeneity, gender, and sexuality and disrupts all three.” The puns within Miss Chief's name are also inspired by early 20th century artist
Marcel Duchamp Henri-Robert-Marcel Duchamp (, , ; 28 July 1887 – 2 October 1968) was a French painter, sculptor, chess player, and writer whose work is associated with Cubism, Dada, and conceptual art. Duchamp is commonly regarded, along with Pablo Picasso ...
“who in 1921 named his own cross-dressed alter ego Rrose Selavy as a play on the French ‘Eros, c’est la vie’.”


Origins of Miss Chief

Earlier in his career, Monkman was particularly interested in the ways Indigeneity had been represented by 19th century European and American artists like George Catlin, Paul Kane, Albert Bierstadt, and many other Romantic painters. Artists like Catlin and Kane were self-proclaimed ethnographers and documentarians, with Indigenous peoples of Canada and the U.S being their main subjects of study. However, as Alla Myzelev articulates, artists like Catlin and Kane documented “highly idealized representations of Canadian ndigenouspeoples as noble savages.” According to Katherine Brooks, these depictions, which homogenized the peoples and the cultures from distinct Indigenous communities, also “sought to ‘freeze’ ndigenous peoplesin these idealized, yet lost times...” Monkman was also interested in the “subjective position of the artists who produce Western American wild frontier paintings”,Roland Maurice, “The Otherings of Miss Chief: Kent Monkman's Portrait of the Artist as Hunter,” (M.A diss., Carleton University, 2007), 59. like the
Group of Seven The Group of Seven (G7) is an intergovernmental political forum consisting of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom and the United States; additionally, the European Union (EU) is a "non-enumerated member". It is officiall ...
. According to scholar Braden Lee Scott, artists from this famous Canadian group “wanted to depict ‘pristine landscapes of Canada’ that were ‘void of reference to native peoples’.” In response to the “erasures of Indigenous histories” presented in much classic romantic Western art, Monkman parodied famous pieces of art by Catlin, Kane, Bierstadt and artists from the Group of Seven, and incorporated Miss Chief into the remasterings of these pieces. Monkman's parodies of 19th century paintings, and his inclusion of Miss Chief in these works, “steadily erode the authority of the ‘originals’.” Jonathan Katz argues that Monkman is not actually proving certain histories to be entirely false, as he evidently understands and believes in the colonization of the Americas, rather, that Monkman is concerned with the “telling of the past, as opposed to the past itself.” Monkman claims that Miss Chief originated out of “needing someone within that time period” (the settlement of Europeans in North America), and for someone to bear witness to Indigenous history prior to the arrival of settlers. As suggested by Kate and Linda Morris, Miss Chief's ability to time travel and shape-shift directly challenges narratives from Kane and Catlin which attempted to freeze Indigenous peoples and cultures in the past. By her very nature, Miss Chief “...refuses to be frozen in time.” Monkman claims that one of his biggest inspirations for creating Miss Chief was George Catlin's painting Dance to the Berdash, 1835-1837. The painting depicts a traditional Indigenous practice where Indigenous men perform a “ceremonial dance to celebrate a ‘Berdash’” (Berdash was the French word used to describe people who are now known as Two-Spirited). Catlin claimed that this traditional Indigenous custom, which he witnessed and painted, was “disgusting.” In response to both the painting and Catlin's remarks about traditional Indigenous conceptions of gender and sexuality, Monkman was “prompted to incorporate a persona in his paintings who would embrace gender and sexuality, honouring the tradition of the two-spirit in Indigenous societies...” Monkman also was inspired by Catlin's own practice of including himself in his work. Monkman “wanted to create an artistic persona that could rival that of Catlin.” While Miss Chief was incorporated into many of Monkman's works primarily as a tool to challenge historically dominant and homogenizing representations of Indigeneity in fine art, she also served an emotional purpose in allowing Monkman to cope with the often difficult topics he addresses in his pieces. As Monkman states, Miss Chief helps him “lighten how etreats sometimes very dark subject matter because e'slooking at effectively a genocide.”


Portrait of the Artist as Hunter          

The first of Monkman's work that Miss Chief is featured in is Portrait of The Artist as Hunter, 2002, which is an acrylic painting depicting Miss Chief hunting while riding bare-back on a White stallion. The painting's background is “the rolling landscape of the Great Plains...”, and through this setting of the mid-U.S, and the depiction of buffalos running alongside Miss Chief, the painting attempts to mimic “...the ubiquitous nineteenth century image of the buffalo hunt...” The painting is specifically based on
John Mix Stanley John Mix Stanley (January 17, 1814 – April 10, 1872) was an artist-explorer, an American painter of landscapes, and Native American portraits and tribal life. Born in the Finger Lakes region of New York, he started painting signs and portraits ...
’s painting Buffalo Hunt, 1845. In Stanley's original painting, he appropriates “the image of the ndigenousmale and presents him as a mysterious, exotic figure; the subject of romanticized notions of the Noble Savage...” In mimicking Stanley's original work, Monkman reciprocates the act of falsely depicting certain cultures by “appropriating the Romantic Western genre” and providing a similarly false historical narrative. Monkman simultaneously appropriates and reclaims the settler-colonial depictions of the buffalo hunt through Miss Chief. The painting does not show buffalo being hunted, but rather focuses on Miss Chief who hunts the true object of the chase; that is the cowboy. The cowboy as the object of prey is not only indicated by the direction of Miss Chief's bow, but also, as Maurice Roland notes, the nakedness of the cowboy, as his exposed bottom is “a sign that he is to be dominated by his pursuant”, and his unbuttoned shirt suggests “his desirability and vulnerability to sexual contact.” Miss Chief's is also adorned in a combination of twenty-first century high fashion as well as what was considered by settlers as ‘traditional Indigenous clothing’, such as traditional Indigenous headdresses. It is through the reversal of roles between the cowboy and Indigenous person, and Miss Chief's wearing of a headdress, which was a ceremonial article of clothing for many Indigenous nations and would not typically be worn during a hunt, that Monkman demonstrates Miss Chief's ability to confront the falsities within dominant settler-colonial historical narratives. Given that this piece is Miss Chief's first appearance inn Monkman's work, her meaning and purpose as a powerful figure who ironically challenges settler-colonialism in the piece, ultimately sets the tone for the role that Miss Chief plays and the functions that she carries out in many of Monkman's later works.


Two-Spiritedness and Queerness

In creating a figure who could challenge false and problematic historical narratives of Indigeneity in Western fine art and historical documents, Monkman had to reinsert the existence of
two-spirit Two-spirit (also two spirit, 2S or, occasionally, twospirited) is a modern, , umbrella term used by some Indigenous North Americans to describe Native people in their communities who fulfill a traditional third-gender (or other gender-varia ...
identities into colonist histories. Various and distinct conceptions of gender, which went beyond the binary of ‘man’ and ‘woman’, were central to the vitality and culture of Indigenous communities prior to the arrival of European Settlers. Many Indigenous nations had their own words, concepts, and traditions to define and identify people who did not conform to the binary gender system. However, when settler artists, documentarians, and ethnographers like Catlin depicted these distinct and large range of non-binary genders, each of which held a special cultural meaning to distinct Indigenous nations, they simply homogenized these genders with the category of ‘Berdache.’ As Miss Chief explains, “...the French called us the berdache, which stems from an Arabic word - Bardaj - meaning male concubine.” In response to Catlin and other ‘ethnographers’ descriptions of peoples they identified as ‘Berdache’, Monkman introduced the two spirited figure of Miss Chief. Monkman has officially identified both himself and Miss Chief as two-spirit. Monkman has often depicted Miss Chief with a fluid gender, displaying a range of stereotypically masculine, feminine, and
non-binary Non-binary and genderqueer are umbrella terms for gender identities that are not solely male or femaleidentities that are outside the gender binary. Non-binary identities fall under the transgender umbrella, since non-binary people typically ...
characteristics, both in her physical appearance as well as her actions. Miss Chief's identity as a two-spirit person, and her inclusion in Monkman's works that parody 19th century paintings, directly challenges the colonial depictions of the ‘Berdache’ figure. Although Miss Chief displays many stereotypically feminine traits with her clothing and makeup, she also “possesses an idealized masculine body, displays ‘manly’ skills and behaves in an aggressively manly fashion.” She is often depicted as the figure in a position of dominance and authority, and in this way, she challenges the 19th century Settler ethnographers’ and artists’ depiction of two-spirited peoples as ‘slaves’, or ‘inferior’. Furthermore, Miss Chief's unwavering ownership of her two-spirit identity “is an assertion that... the values of settler communities have not entirely succeeded in suppressing the sexual and gender mores of ndigenouscommunities...” In addition to challenging the ‘berdache’ figure, Miss Chief also defies Euro-North American men's depiction of Indigenous masculinity. According to Roland, a primary representation of Indigenous men perpetuated by Euro-North American men in the 19th century, depicted Indigenous men as “full of primitive strength, savage courage, and uncivilized passions.” Monkman ironically does often depict Miss Chief in congruence with this conception of masculinity. However, by combining this representation of masculinity with contemporary drag clothing, makeup and an overall uniquely queer essence, Miss Chief subverts contemporary constructions of masculinity and Indigeneity that are based on dominant mainstream historical narratives. In simply transporting Miss Chief, as a two-spirit person, into both contemporary and historical colonial spaces, Monkman “indigenizes history, by making history and gender more fluid concepts.” He undermines the binaries between men and women, and also between the past and present. Through traveling between eras and histories, Miss Chief shows that “the contemporary view f Indigeneity and two-spiritednessis incomprehensible without the past... we ourselves are still inhabited by these historical ideas and images.” Miss Chief's time travelling abilities not only are useful in an analysis of two-spirit identities, but also for Queer Theory. When Monkman features Miss Chief in pieces that take place throughout the period of the arrival of European settlers up until the 19th century, she appears somewhat out-of-place with her contemporary appearance and 'diva-esque' personality. On the other hand, when Miss Chief is featured in pieces that take place in the 21st century, she appears as “an anachronism, an element of the past bleeding into the present.” This ‘asynchrony’ adds to Miss Chief's distinct queerness, as contemporary theorist Elizabeth Freeman suggests, “asynchrony can be viewed as a queer phenomenon.”


Iconography and Fashion

Miss Chief is often seen wearing prominent designer brands, being featured in shoes like Louboutins, and accessorizing with brands like Louis Vuitton and Hudson's Bay. Miss Chief is also depicted wearing mismatched traditional Indigenous clothing. Oftentimes, she is seen wearing headdresses that were custom to one Indigenous nation, while also wearing
moccasins A moccasin is a shoe, made of deerskin or other soft leather, consisting of a sole (made with leather that has not been "worked") and sides made of one piece of leather, stitched together at the top, and sometimes with a vamp (additional panel o ...
that were traditional to an entirely different Indigenous nation. Reilley Bishop-Stall suggests that Miss Chief's conflation of the customs and traditional wear of distinct Indigenous nations, is a direct reference to homogenizing and fetishizing depictions of Indigeneity in historical Western art and contemporary pop-culture. As Miss Chief herself stated during her performance of Seance at the
Royal Ontario Museum The Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) is a museum of art, world culture and natural history in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is one of the largest museums in North America and the largest in Canada. It attracts more than one million visitors every year ...
in October 2007, artist Paul Kane “...always told me I wasn't authentic enough, as I was constantly traveling back and forth from Europe and always came back with the latest fashions.” According to Miss Chief, Kane didn't see her “as an authentic Aboriginal.” As Alla Myzelev explains, in shifting from past homogenizing depictions of traditional Indigenous dress ‘captured’ by artists like Kane, to contemporary designer fashions of the present, Miss Chief “blurs the accepted boundaries between... authentic and inauthentic cultural formations.”


Miss Chief as ‘Trickster'

In many traditional Indigenous teachings and storytellings, the
trickster In mythology and the study of folklore and religion, a trickster is a character in a story ( god, goddess, spirit, human or anthropomorphisation) who exhibits a great degree of intellect or secret knowledge and uses it to play tricks or otherwi ...
is a kind of supernatural and mischievous being who is often depicted defying social order. Miss Chief is “a trickster, like the Cree Coyote spirit Wasahachuck, undefinable, fluid, charming, upsetting, silly, playful, revealing.” She is able to travel between oppositions that “structure life in North America” by undermining polarities between “the past and present, heresistant and the complicit... heauthentic and the degraded.” She “embodies the refusal of fixed positions”, and therefore, by nature, is a ‘trickster’. Contrary to colonial history, Monkman's works show Miss Chief as the figure who reverses the role between the colonist and the colonized as she fetishizes and culturally oppresses White Euro-North American men. Despite the violence and brutality of her actions in many of Monkman's works, the irony of the depicted scenes are generally considered to be humorous. Staples of humor, like irony, are particularly important for Indigenous writers and artists, as literary critic Eva Gruber explains, many native artists and authors ironically “engage with the representational tropes f Indigeneity very nearly reproducing them in order to subvert and expose them as false constructions.” In the use of irony, Monkman's Miss Chief often farcically recreates images of colonization with a reversal of roles between the Indigenous person and the Settler in order to defy “the written and printed narrative espoused by the so-called victors.” The role of Miss Chief as a trickster in Monkman's works, also alludes to “the tricks Monkman has played on the viewer in the painting.” In Monkman's remasterings of classical Western fine art, Miss Chief is often included to “actively engage with and destabilize olonialhistorical events.” As Shirley Madill argues, Miss Chief's ability to “reverse the gaze of colonizers”, tricks audiences into engaging with a history that is as equally fabricated as the histories depicted in historical documents and Western art that many people would consider to be ‘objective’. In Monkman's works, Miss Chief's dominant position and her “commanding presence shows istoricaldocuments to be the fantasies they truly are.”


Group of Seven Inches

In 2005, Monkman gave a live performance of The Taxonomy of The European Male, “which was later followed by a separate shooting session of Taxonomy.” The content from that session was eventually edited into the film Group of Seven Inches. Although Miss Chief had already existed within Monkman's work for years prior to this performance and film, Group of Seven Inches was a major step in the evolution of Miss Chief's character, as it was the first time Monkman physically and publicly realized the character through his own body. Monkman's film begins with a long shot of Miss Chief, played by Monkman, riding bareback on a horse. Then, the camera focuses on two young European men in the woods, who Miss Chief spots and seductively persuades to join her in her studio. There, Miss Chief begins to paint the European subjects, providing them with liquor, and then eventually pouring whiskey all over them. Later, without any visuals, Miss Chief confirms that “both men are proven to measure seven inches.” After the three characters fall asleep, the film continues with Miss Chief waking the men up and giving them instructions to put on “authentic European costumes, oplay the piano, and dance among Miss Chief's paintings.” The film then ends with the young men, dressed in traditional 19th century European clothing, looking at Miss Chief as she walks away, as she has completed her study of the European male. Important to the film is the setting and context behind Monkman's inspiration for it. When Monkman was doing his artist residency at the McMichael Gallery in Vaughan, Ontario, the ‘First nations’ section of the gallery would repeatedly play
Edward Curtis Edward Sherriff Curtis (February 19, 1868 – October 19, 1952) was an American photographer and ethnologist whose work focused on the American West and on Native American people. Sometimes referred to as the "Shadow Catcher", Curtis traveled ...
’ film In the Land of the Headhunters, 1914. The film has been widely criticized for its depiction of Indigenous peoples as ‘frozen in time’, and for “staging traditional clothing... on the bodies of already-modern ndigenouspeoples to supposedly document what he referred to as the last remains of ‘authentic Indigeneity...” The gallery's support of Curtis’ ‘documentary’, was a major inspiration for Monkman to take Miss Chief from the hypothetical realm in his paintings, to the physical realm of photography and film. In addition to Monkman's mimicry of Curtis’ documentary style and themes, the film also speaks to critiques of the work of Canadian Group of Seven artist:
Tom Thomson Thomas John Thomson (August 5, 1877July 8, 1917) was a Canadian artist active in the early 20th century. During his short career, he produced roughly 400 oil sketches on small wood panels and approximately 50 larger works on canvas. His ...
. Miss Chief's studio, where much of the film takes place, is Thomson's rebuilt studio. Prior to the creation of the film, Monkman had long been parodying 19th century ethnographic depictions of Indigeneity. However, these parodies always were based on, and remastered through fine art like paintings and drawings. While it is important to disprove the validity of 19th century Western artworks that constructed a false history of Indigenous peoples and cultures, the arrival of photography and filmmaking, and the depiction of Indigeneity through these mediums, are often publicly conceived as more reliable ‘evidence.’ In speaking to the seeming objectivity shown in photography and documentary filmmaking, Bill Nichols explains that “the bond between photographic, video, or digital images and what they represent can be extraordinarily powerful even if it can also be entirely fabricated.” Reilley Bishop-Stall agrees that with today's development in technology “the evidential power of photographs and films has largely been disproved.” However, as Bishop-Stall still argues, the general public's awareness of “potential manipulation...” of contemporary photographs and films “...has served to wrongly imbue earlier images with more authority.” Therefore, visual media like filmmaking from the early 20th century is arguably more capable of constructing false histories of Indigeneity, which according to Monkman, was the case with Curtis’ documentary. In the use of super-88-mm film, and Monkman's decision to “edit the video to appear as an early twentieth-century silent documentary film,” The Group of Seven Inches mimics early 20th century documentarians, like Curtis, and “demonstrates how easy it is to make something appear factual in historical record.” In congruence with other depictions of Monkman's alter ego and her interactions with European settlers, Miss Chief primarily takes the dominant role among her ‘European subjects’, and she reverses the role between the ‘colonizer’ and the ‘colonized’. In Miss Chief's determined desire to study and document the European males, she alludes to the “...colonial ethnographic practices that sought to capture and contain vestiges of ‘primitive’ native ways of life...” However, as she fetishizes, homogenizes, and misrepresents her European subjects, she also attempts to restrict the spaces they operate in by bringing the men out of their preferred locations, and by trying to make them vulnerable through inebriation. In doing so, Miss Chief ironically references the contradictions in historical documentations of Indigeneity, as so-called ‘ethnographers’ and ‘documentarians’, as Pauline Wakeham argues, were simultaneously also the “preservers and the predators of the ‘vanishing race.’”


Awards

*
Indspire Award The Indspire Awards, until 2012 the National Aboriginal Achievement Awards, are annual awards presented by Indspire in Canada. The awards are intended to celebrate and encourage excellence in the Aboriginal community. About The awards were fi ...
(2014) * Premier's Award for Excellence in the Arts (2017)


References


Further reading

* Madill, Shirley.
Kent Monkman: Life & Work
'' Toronto: Art Canada Institute, 2022. ISBN 978-1-4871-0280-7 * Astrid M. Fellner: ''Camping Indigeneity. The Queer Politics of Kent Monkman.'' In: ''The Dark Side of Camp Aesthetics. Queer Economy of Dust, Dirt, and Patina.'' Ed. Ingrid HotzDavis, Georg Vogt, Franziska Bergmann. Routledge, New York 2017, pp 156– 176 *Brandon, Laura.
War Art in Canada: A Critical History
'. Toronto: Art Canada Institute, 2021. ISBN 978-1-4871-0271-5 *Monkman, Kent. ''Revision and Resistance: mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People) at The Metropolitan Museum of Art''. Toronto: Art Canada Institute, 2020. ISBN 9781487102258 *Scott, Braden Lee. "Pornoarchaeology of Kent Monkman's Group of Seven Inches." ''Porn Studies'' 8, no. 3 (2021): 296-313.


External links

*
"Introducing Miss Chief"
by Shirley Madill, an excerpt from ''Revision and Resistance: mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People) at The Metropolitan Museum of Art'', published by the Art Canada Institute
"A Practice of Recovery"
by Sasha Suda, an excerpt from ''Revision and Resistance: mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People) at The Metropolitan Museum of Art'', published by the Art Canada Institute
"Decolonizing History Painting"
by Ruth B. Phillips and Mark Salber Phillips, an excerpt from ''Revision and Resistance: mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People) at The Metropolitan Museum of Art'', published by the Art Canada Institute
"A Vision for the Future"
by Nick Estes, an excerpt from ''Revision and Resistance: mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People) at The Metropolitan Museum of Art'', published by the Art Canada Institute
"Inside Kent Monkman's Studio"
by Jami C. Powell, an excerpt from ''Revision and Resistance: mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People) at The Metropolitan Museum of Art'', published by the Art Canada Institute
Kent Monkman
at the
National Gallery of Canada The National Gallery of Canada (french: Musée des beaux-arts du Canada), located in the capital city of Ottawa, Ontario, is Canada's national art museum. The museum's building takes up , with of space used for exhibiting art. It is one of the ...
*
Historic Drag - Kent Monkman's new show redresses colonial art
and
The Alternative Realism of Kent Monkman - A virtuoso paints Indigenous life into Canadian history
in
The Walrus ''The Walrus'' is an independent, non-profit Canadian media organization. It is multi-platform and produces an 8-issue-per-year magazine and online editorial content that includes current affairs, fiction, poetry, and podcasts, a national s ...
Magazine
Works by Kent Monkman
at Pierre François Ouellette art contemporain, Montréal (PFOAC) {{DEFAULTSORT:Monkman, Kent 1965 births Living people Artists from Ontario Artists from Winnipeg Canadian drag queens Canadian people of Irish descent Cree people First Nations installation artists First Nations filmmakers First Nations painters First Nations performance artists First Nations photographers Canadian LGBT artists LGBT First Nations people Indspire Awards People from St. Mary's, Ontario Two-spirit people 21st-century Canadian painters Canadian male painters 21st-century Canadian photographers Non-binary drag performers LGBT photographers 21st-century Canadian male artists