
“This program is important, because while art-marking is flourishing in many Native communities—especially along the Northwest Coast—in other communities there are few teachers and even fewer historical artworks from which to learn,” Dr. Kathryn Bunn-Marcuse, director of the Bill Holm Center and Burke Museum curator of Northwest Native art said. “The cultural creations in the Burke’s collection are imbued with the knowledge of their makers and can be a catalyst for transferring this knowledge across generations.”
As Nuxalk artist Latham Mack said of his visit to the Burke: “It’s great to go and study the old pieces, to look at them, and hold them. You feel their energy. You can’t get over the quality, the detail, in the pieces. They’re some of the best teachers you get.”
“Studying like this is an extension of our apprenticeship with our ancestors,” said Haida artist Evelyn Vanderhoop, a previous BHC grant recipient.
Grant applications for 2022 are open until December 3, 2021, with notifications of awards in early January 2022. Native and First Nations artists can apply at burkemuseum.org/bhcgrants.
Applications for grants in 2023 will open in Fall 2022. Please share this article with others who may be interested in applying!
Article Source: Burke Museum
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