Close Menu
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
What's Hot

TV tonight: a relaxing art competition in the Lake District | Television

January 14, 2026

Comment | In the run up to the US election, Boston’s Museum of Fine Art is hopeful about art’s role in a democratic future – The Art Newspaper

January 14, 2026

Drake Honored as Artist of the Decade at Billboard Music Awards 2021: Watch

January 14, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Get In Touch
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Rate My ArtRate My Art
  • Home
  • Art Investment
  • Art Investors
  • Art Rate
  • Artist
  • Fine Art
  • Invest in Art
Rate My ArtRate My Art
Home»Artist»Museums often present Indigenous cultures as ‘frozen in time.’ Artist Kent Monkman on shifting that narrative
Artist

Museums often present Indigenous cultures as ‘frozen in time.’ Artist Kent Monkman on shifting that narrative

By MilyeJune 6, 20252 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email


Museums are inherently colonial, according to Cree artist Kent Monkman. 

“You don’t see Indigenous people going around the world collecting artifacts and material and putting them under a roof like the way that these colonial European cultures have done,” he says in this bonus clip from So Surreal: Behind the Masks. “We would never do that.

“You can’t really decolonize [museums] because they are inherently colonial. But you can change the conversation about what’s inside them.”

In 2019, two of Monkman’s paintings were unveiled in the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Great Hall in New York. 

“[The Met] commissioned me to create two paintings for the Great Hall,” he says. “They decided to open their collection and have artists come in and do interventions.” 

Monkman explains that the Met’s collection includes romantic, idealized representations of Indigenous people. Works like Eugène Delacroix’s The Natchez, for example, reinforce the theme of the dying or vanishing race. 

The painting shows a couple with their newborn after they fled the French forces that decimated their tribe. According to Monkman, it implies this is the last of the Natchez people, but in fact, they are very much alive. 

“I’ve really taken to task artworks of that period to examine how devastating those kinds of representations are,” he says. “It reinforces over and over again that Indigenous people only existed in the past and that we’re not relevant today or in the future.”

Monkman says he wanted to celebrate the life and resilience of Indigenous people in his two murals for the Met. 

A man looks at the camera as he stands in front of a large painting featuring a naked man on a rocky short helping people from the water.
Cree artist Kent Monkman in front of his painting, Welcoming the Newcomers, as part of the installation mistikôsiwak (Wooden Boat People) in 2019. (Rezolution Pictures)

While change in museums is slow, there is movement, Monkman says. He has served on museum boards and has seen museums hire Indigenous curators over the last 20 years. 

“These are all significant changes in terms of how Indigenous people are able to interact and reflect on the stories that have largely been told by the settler culture,” he says.

The documentary So Surreal: Behind the Masks explores how Indigenous masks from B.C. and Alaska made it into the hands of European Surrealists. Watch it now on CBC Gem and the CBC Docs YouTube channel.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleRecord Breaker! Alex Warren named US artist with longest-running UK Number 1 single ever!
Next Article Discover Art That Speaks to Your Soul at the Novi Fine Art Fair!

Related Posts

Artist

TV tonight: a relaxing art competition in the Lake District | Television

January 14, 2026
Artist

Drake Honored as Artist of the Decade at Billboard Music Awards 2021: Watch

January 14, 2026
Artist

Abstract Expressionist’s paintings co-star in Golden Globe-nominated Netflix series The Beast in Me – The Art Newspaper

January 13, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

TV tonight: a relaxing art competition in the Lake District | Television

January 14, 2026

How can I avoid art investment scams?

August 26, 2024

Art Investment Strategies: How to Capitalize on the Buyer’s Art Market

August 26, 2024
Monthly Featured
Artist

Artist Narrates The Story Of Sunita Williams’s Epic Return To Earth In Stunning Mithila Painting

MilyeMarch 20, 2025
Art Investors

METALLICA Among Investors In $13.7 Million Funding Round For Artist-To-Fan Platform MEDALLION

MilyeOctober 11, 2024
Artist

Yorkshire artist’s to feature at Blackpool Illuminations

MilyeAugust 20, 2025
Most Popular

Xcel Energy backs off plans for another gas rate hike in Colorado

October 21, 2024

WWE Hall Of Famer Praises Roman Reigns As “A True Artist”; Compares Success To Seth Rollins’ Rise

October 16, 2024

Write a funny caption for artist Banksy’s new animal-themed collection

August 26, 2024
Our Picks

Who Was the Late Robert Redford’s Wife Sibylle Szaggars? 5 Things to Know About the German Artist

September 16, 2025

Bonifas arts center aided by Gartlands | News, Sports, Jobs

August 25, 2025

As butterflies decline at alarming rate globally, new book publishing 18th-century drawings is invaluable resource

October 14, 2024
Weekly Featured

Malaysian artist gives shapeshifting Venom a batik makeover

October 18, 2024

Computer engineering grads face double the unemployment rate of art history majors

June 20, 2025

EU dealers lobby to slash VAT rates on art sales – The Art Newspaper

July 2, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
  • Get In Touch
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
© 2026 Rate My Art

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.