PodcastJuly 22, 2021 • View in browserAfter Oklahoma lawyer Brett Chapman (Pawnee) started tweeting about the tomahawk of Ponca Chief Standing Bear, which is currently in Harvard University’s Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology in Cambridge, Massachusetts, the revered object may actually be going home. His questions raised eyebrows, and as Cassie Packard reported for Hyperallergic, the museum later posted a statement on its website explaining that the museum and the Ponca tribe are “in active discussion about the homecoming of Chief Standing Bear’s pipe tomahawk belonging to the Ponca people.” Chapman, who has Ponca heritage, explains the history of the tomahawk and why the return of the heirloom is important. A painter who may be best known for her contribution to the Photorealism movement, Audrey Flack has been a working artist for roughly 70 years. Now at age 90, Flack reflects on the art world, from her days as part of the New York School of artists in the 1950s and 60s; her rise to fame as the only prominent female Photorealist; her embrace of sculpture and public art in the 1980s and 90s; and her return to painting only a few years ago. Flack also shares her experiences in college with renowned modernist Joseph Albers; a strange and unnerving experience with Jackson Pollock; how she coped raising children through all of this; and much more. Subscribe to Hyperallergic on Apple Podcasts, and anywhere else you listen to podcasts. Join Our CommunityBecome a Hyperallergic Member and join over 5,000 readers committed to sustaining independent arts journalism. |