|
DANA
CLAXTON’S SITTING BULL
and the MOOSE JAW SIOUX
by David Garneau
[Originally
published: "Dana Claxton: Sitting Bull and the Moose
Jaw Sioux." Vie des Arts #197 2004: 93.]
Since 1997 Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan,
has attracted tourists to its prohibition-era Tunnels
tour. Costumed actors lead visitors from basement to
basement under the historic and well-preserved downtown
while regaling listeners with tales of smuggling and
a rather sketchy link to Chicago’s Al Capone.
It’s a neat idea, but after seeing Dana Claxton’s
Sitting Bull and the Moose Jaw Sioux (September 9 to
October 24) at the Moose Jaw Museum & Art Gallery,
it is clear that a more dramatic regional story has
been overshadowed by a near-fiction.
Dana Claxton’s four channel
video installation tells the little known story of Sitting
Bull and his band’s exodus from the 1876 Battle
of Little Bighorn (Custer’s last stand) to Moose
Jaw where many of their descendants continue to live.
Among the exiles were the artist’s great, great
maternal grandparents. Sitting Bull and the Moose Jaw
Sioux consists of four digital projections. The first
appears on a stand-alone wall in the middle and a third
of the way into the large, dark room. It features footage
of the local landscape: verdant hills and fields, tree
lined paths, and the river—said to bend like a
moose’s jaw. The scenes are unremarkable, but
as the exhibition unfolds and the viewer learns that
this was the site of Sitting Bull’s winter encampment,
the images resonate with meaning and feeling. The moving
camera becomes the artist searching for a connection
to her past and to this place.
The three other projections are
arranged into a theatrical-sized, floor-to-ceiling triptych.
It begins with an image of Sitting Bull in the center
panel and old newspaper clippings to the right and left.
The clippings are accounts of the Sioux in Moose Jaw
over the last century and some. Laid over these pictures
is a scrolling text translating a conversation, in Lakota,
between two elders, Hartland and Francis Goodtrack,
who relate their families’ experience in the Moose
Jaw area after the migration. They recount both the
hardships and more positive aspects of the resettlement.
Claxton’s strategy is both
good historical storytelling and creative art. The narrative
is layered rather than linear, dialogic rather than
authoritarian, and open-ended rather than contained.
At least four accounts unspool at any one time. While
they always compliment each other and advance the story,
the gentle polyphony encourages repeated viewings and
the sense that we can gather only glimpses and should
not imagine ourselves completely informed. Unlike conventional
documentaries, there is no narrative arc, rising tension,
climax, and denouement. In fact, the initiating event,
the Battle at Little Bighorn, does get told until near
the end, and its central antagonist, Custer, is barely
mentioned. This is the Sioux account of the battle and
their subsequent lives. It is eventful, but, until now,
only a footnote to settler history.
The rest of the projection is
a collage of historical documents and images interplaying
with reflections of the Sioux elders. While there are
stories of starvation, deprivation and the broken treaty
promises familiar to people around here, Claxton does
an affecting job of pairing the grand historical passages
with more homey personal accounts. There is no gloating
over the slaughter at Little Bighorn by the victors
(the Sioux), rather the story centers on the aftermath
and Sitting Bull and his band’s crossing the into
Canada to avoid reprisals. Surprisingly, while there
are allusions to hardship, Claxton also records stories
of the people being well treated by Canadian settlers.
Francis Goodtrack recounts that his father told him
that the Lakota who worked in Moose Jaw worked side-by-side
and made friends with white men.
For me, the most resonant aspect
of the show was the frequent pairing of the elders’
Lakota and English voices over images of the river and
trails. Claxton gently lays an Aboriginal view of history
and personal experience on the land. I doubt anyone
experiencing this exhibition can look at their local
landscape as they once did. Ghosts and the stories of
their descendants now inscribe it. Driving through the
area shortly after seeing the show, I was struck by
the sensation that the farms were a thin veneer that
only recently covered these older stories. Claxton inscribes
fills this seemingly empty landscape with living memories
and offers Moose Jaw a much more compelling story than
the maybe visit of a Chicago gangster.
|