Wowicakekage: Dakota Art Encoded
Wičáŋȟpi Iyótaŋ Wiŋ (Autumn Cavender) of Granite Falls will be exhibiting in the Southwest Minnesota Arts Council gallery May 12th through June 17th, 2022. Join us for an in-person reception in Marshall on Thursday June 2nd from 5-7 pm, and/or a Virtual Reception on Wednesday, June 8 at 5:30 pm
To join virtual reception via zoom: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/84913766476?pwd=cExSQ1VqM2piQmozQnNDdy83UjRVUT09
Meeting ID: 849 1376 6476
Passcode: 415122
If using landline to join, find your local number: https://us06web.zoom.us/u/klz9ljlAp
Keep up to date about these events through our social media on Facebook and Instagram, or you can always email us for details: info@swmnarts.org.
Wowicakekage is a travelling exhibit of Wicanhpi Iyotan Win (Autumn Cavender)’s exploration and experimental applications of digital and generative art practices within a Dakota context. This exhibit highlights just one of the generative processes that Autumn has explored and developed.
Much of Autumn’s practice is rooted in an exploration of traditional Dakota artistic methodology, much of which centers around quillwork as a method of record-keeping and encoding through design. Traditional designs depict and encode cosmological concepts, personal events, and connections to land and ancestors.
Using this quillworking philosophy, Autumn explores innovative ways to generate Dakota geometrics and designs, encoding data into design. This exhibit highlights her process of “generative quillwork” as both a digital and ancestral technology.
At its most basic, generative quillwork is a culturally specific way of visualizing sound. From the perspective and principles of Dakota aesthetics, it is a way of depicting how the sounds of songs and stories reverberate through space and a Dakota sense of direction and design. And as a quillworking methodology, it is a way of encoding words, songs, and stories into color schemes, patterns, and designs.
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Wicanhpi Iyotan Win (Autumn Cavender) is Wahpetunwan Dakota and a midwife from Pezihutazizi K’api Makoca (Upper Sioux Community). A natural-born book nerd with no sense of design or aesthetics or much interest in art, her older cousins considered her a hopeless case when it came to teaching her beadwork.
Knowing the importance of the cultural items surrounding new babies, it was during the pregnancy of her first child that Autumn south out her cousins and teachers in her community to prepare these items, among them Marisa Anywaush, Joyce LaBatte, Erin Griffin, Randilynn Boucher, and her quillworker mentors David and Merna Lewis.
Through her apprenticeships, and ongoing study and training, Autumn is finding new ways to see, visualize and encode designs using traditional Dakota aesthetic and design processes. Her current practice explores quillwork Dakota methodology and its applications through ancestral, digital, and generative technologies.
Her “generative quillwork” has been featured most recently in exhibits at Art Basel-Miami, Miami Art Week, and SXSW, and her work has featured internationally in exhibits on a range of topics including Indigenous motherhood, the art of gender and sexuality, and showcases of innovative digital and generative art.
Cavender has received two Artist Equity Grants from SMAC in 2020 & 2021.
Artwork pictured: “Ohutkan: Genesis”
This activity is funded, in part, by an appropriation from the MN State Legislature with money from the State’s general fund and tis arts and cultural heritage fund that was created by vote of the people of Minnesota on November 4, 2008.