Installation view of IMIITAIKS’IISTSIK’OONI by Sikapinakii Low Horn. Courtesy of the artist. Photos by Blaine Campbell.
SIKAPINAKII LOW HORN
IMIITAIKS’IISTSIK’OONI
27 JANUARY 2024 - 20 APRIL 2024
Sikapinakii Low Horn’s practice combines painting and installation in the pursuit of welcoming spaces that connect back to Blackfoot land and stories. IMIITAIKS’IISTSIK’OONI, which translates to “the dog days” in Blackfoot, refers to a time from a few hundred years ago to thousands of years ago before horses arrived on this land. During this time, Blackfoot people were closely co-dependent on dogs to pull the canine-sized travois of two long poles and a leather harness to help with the labour of moving camp. The importance of dogs in the Blackfoot way of life, especially before the arrival of horses, can be seen in changes such as the sizes of tipis that accommodated dog companions.
In the Library Gallery, Low Horn’s painted mural on the white walls of the space is concerned with the close inter-species connections of the dog days and the continuing importance of dogs in Blackfoot culture. Within the painting, Low Horn includes a common motif of their work, vibrant seas of undulating lines that surround the dogs and their travois. As these lines converge and move together, they appear as water ripples, air currents, or moving grass, another reminder of the dynamic exchanges between natural forces and the beings that experience them.
Low Horn creates spaces meant to feel welcoming to other Blackfoot people. Considering the exclusive histories of libraries and galleries to Indigenous knowledge, Low Horn intervenes on the physical structures of the settler institution, pushing back against assumptions that spaces for learning or knowledge must also be austere. Low Horn’s mural is a painted gesture of invitation to engage in open learning about Blackfoot stories while also acknowledging close relationships to canine friends.
Curated by Adam Whitford, Associate Curator & Exhibitions Manager
Sikapinakii Low Horn is a member of the Siksika First Nation which is a part of the Blackfoot Confederacy in Southern Alberta. They graduated with their Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2019 and are currently attending the University of Calgary as a Master of Fine Arts graduate student. Low Horn is researching Blackfoot Cowboys in Alberta but their overall practice as a mixed media is to tell the stories of their people. Educating others about the Blackfoot people in hopes of creating a comfortable space for all.
SAAG Library Gallery: The Gallery presents exhibitions as in-situ interventions within our Library. The Library Gallery features a diverse selection of artworks and mediums from regional contemporary artists. Artists are invited to think of the library as a unique exhibition context by investigating the Gallery’s programming around readership, publications, and its place within Lethbridge’s historic Carnegie library which opened in 1922. Artists are encouraged to consider the physical architecture of the library and its material holdings, responding to a broader and generative idea of what a library might be, as they change and adapt to new forms of knowledge production.
We acknowledge the support of the City of Lethbridge, the Canada Council for the Arts, and the Alberta Foundation for the Arts.