In conjunction with An Indigenous Present, experience a museum-wide takeover of provocative sound-based installations, films, and performances by Diné composer, musician, and Pulitzer Prize-winning artist Raven Chacon. Known for his visual score-based practice, Chacon will present more than a dozen works of various scale, performed by area musicians and artists throughout and outside the museum. The pieces integrate found sounds, natural elements, and conceptual experimentation to create a singular experience each time they are executed. Central to Chacon’s practice is a connection of Diné (Navajo) worldviews and relationship models with Western classical, avant-garde, and art-music traditions.

At the ICA, a cellist will perform a solo inspired by a traditional Navajo hunting song. A recording from a found cassette will be sonically reinterpreted by a vocalist. An album composed using audio shards from 140 Beatles songs will score visitors’ ascent and descent in the museum’s glass elevator. A vinyl record will be amplified and manipulated using sharpened wooden kabob skewers. Outside, pairs of brass musicians will enact a vertically oriented piece meant to acknowledge the temporal relationships that align past and future knowledge. Experience these activations, and many more, alongside Chacon’s visual and sound-based work in the galleries as part of An Indigenous Present.

About Raven Chacon

Timed programming

Ongoing programming, 10 AM – 5 PM

Accessibility


An Indigenous Present is organized by Jeffrey Gibson and Jenelle Porter, guest curators, with Erika Umali, Curator of Collections, and Max Gruber, Curatorial Assistant.

This exhibition is supported in part by Mathieu O. Gaulin, the Leonard and Ruth Horwich Family Foundation, Peggy J. Koenig, Kim Sinatra, the Fotene Demoulas Fund for Curatorial Research and Publications, and an anonymous donor.

With warmest thanks, we gratefully acknowledge the generosity of the ICA’s Avant Guardian Society in making this exhibition possible.