Eleanor Harwood Gallery is pleased to present Black Elk Speaks, our third solo show with Kirk Maxson.
Kirk Maxson has been showing in the Bay Area since 1996, garnering praise and recognition for his meticulous metal works. Black Elk Speaks explores the narrative of Native American lineage within real and imagined personal histories of Americans. Maxson uses books and song titles as inspiration for works in the show. Maxson grew up believing that his maternal Grandfather was part Cherokee, a heritage that his family wholeheartedly embraced. Members of his family registered with the Western Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma. As a child Maxson enjoyed participating in many Native American cultural rights and ceremonies. Maxson accompanied his mother to these events and during his young adulthood sought out his own understanding of his heritage through the music of Buffy Sainte-Marie and Johnny Cash and through books, like the nonfiction novel by John G. Neihardt titled “Black Elk Speaks”.
Many Americans share a mythology of a family linked to Native American ancestry. While it is statistically unlikely that as many people as claim Native American roots actually have them, the frequency of Americans claiming such indigenous ancestral relationships is an interesting phenomenon. It likely points to many Americans wanting to a part of the mythology of a pre-colonized country while also absolving them of complicity in a variety of colonial horrors. Including themselves in a massacred ancestral lineage serves as a way to disavow the reality of their colonial involvement. This identification gives people the right to say “this was done to my people” instead of “my family did this”. In many cases both statements are probably true.
Maxson is exploring imaginary and narrative connection to his heritage by referring to book titles and songs in the titling of works in the show. His installations are made of metal and depict native and nonnative plant species. Some plants are used as medicines in Native American healing rituals and some plants are invasive species drawing a parallel with the colonization of America by non-native peoples.
His titles also reference phrases from presidential speeches with promises made and broken. As Long As the Grass Grows is a ten foot wide installation of aluminum grass. It refers to a speech by President Monroe. In 1817 he stated that, “As long as water flows, or grass grows upon the earth, or the sun rises to show your pathway, or you kindle your camp fires, so long shall you be protected from your present habitations”. In 1828 President Jackson promised the Native Americans they could keep their land, “Which they shall possess as long as grass grows and the water flows….”. The phrase “As long as the grass grows and the water flows…” has come to symbolize broken treaties the United States has had with Native Americans
About the Artist Kirk Maxson was born 1967 in Eugene, OR. He lives and works in San Francisco Maxson moved to San Francisco in 1992, and lived in the Mission and participated in the San Francisco Mission School art scene. He exhibited artwork in the seminal exhibition spaces of Adobe books, Ascena, and ESP during the height of the Mission School.
Subsequently he has created multiple permanent site-specific installation for corporate collections including ClimateWorks Foundation, San Francisco, CA, Kilroy Realty Corporation, Bellevue, WA, UBM, San Francisco, CA, Genentech Inc., South San Francisco, CA, Morgan Stanley Corporate Collection, The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Collection, Avant Corporate Collection, Menlo Park, CA and Fresh Connection Corporation, Lafayette, CA.
He has also created numerous installations for private residences. Maxson was recently commissioned to create four original wings for the 2017 Victoria Secret Fashion Show in Shanghai, China.
He is represented by Eleanor Harwood Gallery, San Francisco, and has previously worked with Eli Ridgeway Gallery and the Gensler Architecture firm in San Francisco.