High Visibility

On Location in Rural America and Indian Country

November 30, 2020 - May 30, 2021

Fred Donath Jr. Memorial and William and Anna Jane Schlossman Galleries

A multi-year project in creation that will result in a two-gallery exhibition and several programs, High Visibility: On Location in Rural America and Indian Country is diverse in content and media. Visitors will engage with installations, performance works, interdisciplinary work, alongside traditional 2 and 3-dimensional pieces chosen to reflect the myriad dialogues of perceptions, realities, and issues of rural life, as well as the social, cultural, and historical conditions which shape their expression. Plains Art Museum and independent curator, writer and artist Matthew Fluharty present a diverse range of artworks, practices, and histories from rural America and Native Nations where rural location is sincerely central to the artist’s creative practice, with a primary but not exclusive focus on the Plains region. National and Regional multi-disciplinary contemporary artists include Joseph J. Allen, Raven Chacon, Meghan Duda, Lillian Colton, Joe Harjo, Bruce Engebretson, Sabrina Hornung, R.J. Kern, Anna Johnson, Athena LaTocha, Marcus Lund, Cannupa Hanska Luger, Shanai Matteson, Sara Pajunen, Andrew Messerschmidt, M12 Studio, Erika Nelson, Lisa Bergh, Andrew Nordin, Fredrick Benedict Scheel, Chris Sauter, Aaron Spangler, Spiritual Technologies Project, Jovan C. Speller, Xavier Tavera, Marty Two Bulls Jr., Karl Unnasch, and Josh Zeis.

A line-up of knowledge-building strategies, programs and events that are inclusive, expansive, and multivocal in essence is integral to the High Visibility. Lead project collaborator Art of the Rural (in collaboration with M12 Studio and other national arts groups) will work with the Museum to launch a vital podcast series, a printed newspaper with essays on each work and the context for the exhibition, and a series of engaging artist-led talks.

Curatorial Team Leader Matthew Fluharty is a visual artist, writer, and field-based researcher living in Winona, Minnesota. He is the Executive Director of Art of the Rural and a member of M12 Studio. Fluharty’s poetry and essays have been widely published in the US and abroad and are present within the field-establishing publication A Decade of Country Hits: Art on the Rural Frontier (Jam Sam, 2014). His collaborations with M12 Studio have recently been featured at the Santa Fe Art Institute, Center for Contemporary Art (Santa Fe), and the Iowa State Fair. His multidisciplinary collaboration with Jesse Vogler and Jen Colten in the American Bottom region of the Mississippi River was recently the subject of an exhibition at Central Features in Albuquerque and the recipient of a grant from the Mellon Foundation. Fluharty is currently a Curatorial Fellow with the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.

For more information about the High Visibility exhibition, exhibiting artists, podcast and publication, please visit: inhighvisibility.org.

High Visibility Virtual Artist Talks

Migration, Equity, and Diversity in Rural Spaces with Xavier Tavera
Saturday, May 1, 7 pm

The Nekoma Pyramid with Marcus Lund and Joshua Zeis
Thursday, May 6, 7 pm

Artists as Activists with Shanai Matteson and Cannupa Hanska Luger
Thursday, May 27, 7 pm
Click here to register.

Please join Plains Art Museum and Art of the Rural virtually on three dates in May as five artists with art in the High Visibility exhibition explore their take on three topics surrounding their place in rural spaces. Join host Joe Williams as he guides us through conversations with Xavier Tavera, Marcus Lund, Joshua Zeis, Shanai Matteson, and Cannupa Hanska Luger.

Generous support for this exhibition is provided by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. This project is supported in part by an award from the National Endowment for the Arts.
left to right: Xavier Tavera, Quinceañera, 2017, photography, 33 x 44 in, Courtesy of the artist • Raven Chacon, American Ledger No. 2, 2019, Digital work on paper, 8 x 4 ft, Courtesy of the artist • Cannupa Hanska Luger, still image from Future Ancestral Technologies project • Rural Aesthetic Initiative: Lisa Bergh and Andrew Nordin, Stoppage 1 (For Marcel), 2014, reclaimed dock wood, gold and pink paint, variable, approximately 2 in. x 12 ft. x 3 ft, Courtesy of the artist • Aaron Spangler, Untitled, 2020, crayon rubbing on linen, 10 x 20 ft and Installation view of Tripod Untitled Sculpture series on wood, 2018-2020, Courtesy of the artist

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