SALEM, MASS.- The Peabody Essex Museum presents an exhibition celebrating one of the most influential and inventive Native American artists of the 20th-century, T.C. Cannon (1946-1978, Caddo/Kiowa). T.C. Cannon: At the Edge of America ౼ on view at PEM from March 3 through June 10, 2018 ౼ explores the dynamic creative range and legacy of an artist whose life was cut short at age 31. Through nearly 90 works, including 30 major paintings, works on paper, poetry and musical recordings, Cannons distinctive and affecting worldview shines through in this groundbreaking exhibition that is organized by PEM and will tour the country through 2019. This is the first major traveling exhibition of his work since 1990.
Deeply personal yet undeniably political, Cannons artwork adeptly channels his cultural heritage, experience as a Vietnam War veteran, and the turbulent social and political climate that defined 1960s and 70s America. Amid ongoing national and global conversations about ethnic identity, social justice, land rights and cultural appropriation, Cannons work continues to engage issues that are as relevant now as they were 50 years ago. Never shying from the complexity and nuance of identity politics, Cannon interrogated American history and popular culture through his Native lens and showed us that Native American history and culture are integral to the American experience, says Karen Kramer, exhibition curator and PEMs Curator of Native American and Oceanic Art and Culture.
Throughout his highly-productive but short career, Cannon fostered a deep intellectual curiosity about the human experience and developed a signature painting style that favored bold color combinations and mash-ups between Native and non-Native elements. In an innovative approach, Cannon fused visual elements from his Native American worldview with European and American artistic influences, such as Vincent van Gogh, Henri Matisse, and Robert Rauschenberg. Cannons hybrid visual vocabulary aimed to restore the identity and agency of his sitters, situating his Native subjects within distinct settings, whether contemporary interiors or timeless landscapes.
SIGHTS & SOUNDS
For Cannon, music, poetry and visual art were inseparable. T.C. Cannon: At the Edge of America is the first exhibition to unify the artists multiple forms of creative expression on this scale. Cannons poetry and country-folk style music offer complex perspectives on his life and art as well as his political activism and fascination with history and culture. Experienced alongside his paintings, Cannons written and musical works enhance the visual landscape he so vividly captured on canvas. Taken together, they give us a richer, more multidimensional portrait of an artist whose worldview cannot be neatly or simplistically characterized.
Those close to Cannon consistently speak of him as thoughtful, witty, and introspective. He was measured and intelligenta voracious reader with wide-ranging interests. His book collection included works of Beat poetry, and books on Kabbalah, modern existentialism, and Japanese printmaking. He played guitar, wrote songs, and performed songs by musicians he deeply respected, like Bob Dylan and Woody Guthrie, and his musical interests spanned country and western, to blues, jazz, and opera. Cannon often listened to music in his studio and created paintings from songs and vice versa. The companion song for Cannons 1966 canvas Mama and Papa Have the Going Home Shiprock Blues is preserved in an original, rarely heard audio recording by the artist which plays in the exhibition galleries and whose lyrics are excerpted below:
well ive been out there where the v.c. stay
i write home most every day
it dont seem to ease my pain at all
cause i long for the sand and the piñon trees
sheep manure up to my knees...
oh mama, papas got those blues again
oh mama, papas got the shiprock blues again
PEM has commissioned Choctaw alt-folk musician, Samantha Crain, to write music and perform a song in response to Cannons most monumental painting, a 22-foot mural, Epochs in Plains History: Mother Earth, Father Sun, the Children Themselves (1976-77), which was among his last works painted.
BECOMING CANNON
Tommy Wayne (T.C.) Cannon grew up in a rural farming community in southeastern Oklahoma, raised by his Kiowa father and Caddo mother. Americas cultural revolution was ablaze when Cannon left home in 1964 to begin his journey as an artist at the newly minted experimental arts-based school in Santa Fe, the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA), where he began to address and rethinkon the stage of Western art historythe political narratives between Native Americans and the U.S. Government.
Two years into his training, Cannon painted Mama and Papa Have the Going Home Shiprock Blues (1966), arguably the most significant of his early works. His aesthetic choices express layered meaning, and an enduring love affair with color and dichotomy. A Navajo man and woman sit together, hybrids of the past and present, wearing their traditional textiles and jewelry, and of-the-moment sunglasses and cigarettes. Now understood as the painting that spurred the revolutionary New Indian Art movement of the 1960s, the work captures Cannons place at the crossroads of Native American and American cultures at a time when the definitions of both were up for debate.
Through Cannons figurative work, he rejected the accepted, expected representations of Native ritual life and instead chose to surface issues of the brutal traumas wrought by colonialism and power dynamics, says Kramer. Concurrently, through his paintings, poetry and music, he also emphasized the ways in which Native Americans persisted and thrivedsometimes in quietly radical everyday waysin the face of oppression. As a powerful voice of a restless generation, Cannons artwork showed Native people that removal from ones land doesnt necessarily erase cultural landscape or eclipse ones deep abiding love and respect for community.
At the height of the counterculture movement, and in the Kiowa warrior cultural tradition, Cannon enlisted in the U.S. Army and spent almost a year in Vietnam in 1968. While Cannon earned two Bronze Star medals for his service in the Tet Offensive as a paratrooper, he was conflicted about the experience. His poetry and letters from this period reveal a disillusioned artist coming to terms with his participation in violence that mirrored Americas colonial past. Vietnam affected not only Cannons emotional landscape but his visual expressions of his experience there.
In 1972, Cannon had a significant career breakthrough. The National Collection of Fine Arts, now the Smithsonian American Art Museum, invited him and his former instructor Fritz Scholder to be in a two-person exhibition, Two American Painters: Fritz Scholder and T.C. Cannon. The exhibition was a landmark success. Jean Aberbach, the owner-dealer of Madison Avenues Aberbach Gallery, purchased almost all of Cannons canvases off the gallery walls, literally, and signed Cannon with the gallery, who represented him nationally and internationally for the remainder of his life. Two American Painters toured Berlin, Belgrade, Istanbul, Madrid, and London, forging his confidence and propelling him forward in his fusion of iconographic images with complex color symbolism and geometric patterns, where his mythic Indians met modernity, and a political gaze became ever-present. Although he drew and sketched prolifically, Cannon painted no more than 50 major canvases and produced just a handful of exquisite woodblock prints and linocuts, before the car accident that ended his life in 1978.
Cannons lifes work, as a masterful interpreter of the complex Native American experience, continues to influence artists and other creative spirits. As the boundaries of American art continue to shift and be reconsidered, making room for a more expansive, inclusive vision, a new look at T.C. Cannons work is perfectly timed to help redefine what it means to be American.