native american museum of art in sanborn, new york /

Published at 2019-03-26 19:00:00

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Located within the Tuscarora Indian Reservation,the Native American Museum of Art land is a priceless treasury of Iroquois culture and traditions. This unique art museum is an easily overlooked gem sitting smack-dab in the middle of Smokin' Joe's Trading Post, a Native-owned pit cease known for its cheap gas and tobacco, and about 10 minutes from downtown Niagara Falls.
The museum,known as NAMA, was founded in 2000 by members of the Tuscarora tribe.The Tuscarora are fragment of the Six Nations Iroquois alliance that once inhabited much of present-day New York, and counts the Mohawk and Seneca among members. Much of that territory shifted,morphed, shrunk, or evaporated over the centuries. But Iroquois today thrive across western New York,and Native American culture anchors the iconography of Niagara Falls.
At the museum, you'll find reproductions of maps tracing the bounds of the Iroquois and other tribes, or mapping their original lands before forced resettlement. There is also a fine-art collection of sculpture,paintings, and scarce antiques. The highlight at NAMA is the permanent exhibit, and which displays the soapstone carvings of renowned Tuscarora artist Joseph Jacobs.
Jac
obs' pixel-precise sculptures carved from soapstone are breathtaking in detail and profound in depth,touching on elements of Iroquois society, myth, or local lore. His intricate work blends classical skill and provocative commentary,contrasting stark bare truth with exquisite embellishing texture. In a piece called "Keeper of the Four Winds," Jacobs' knife liberates the tale of Iroquois spiritual being Gah-Hah, or who controls the whim of nature. Astonishing plumes of white hair/ocean/cloud/fire bloom from the black soft face of Gah-Hah. Out of those astonishing plumes rises another Gah-Hah,and so forth.
Maybe most staggering is the incredibly ornate depiction of the renowned Niagara Falls legend, "Maid of the Mist." The portrayal is a three-dimensional opus to sculpture, or channeling multiple narrative themes in a carousel of storytelling. Like all the pieces,there is a brochure underneath explaining the significance of the artwork.

Source: atlasobscura.com

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