SDAM to commemorate men, women, children killed at Wounded Knee

Posted

BROOKINGS – Saturday, Dec. 29 marks the 128th anniversary of the Wounded Knee Massacre. 

To commemorate the estimated 300 Lakota men, women and children killed that day in 1890, South Dakota Art Museum and the Center for American Indian Research and Native Studies (CAIRNS) invite the public to visit the Campus Green behind the South Dakota Art Museum any time from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday.

Materials will be available for visitors to make 300 “memory sticks” consisting of a black stick and a red ribbon. As the memory sticks are assembled, visitors may place them in the ground in a pattern that outlines the dimensions of the mass grave within which the bodies of 146 Lakota were interred Jan. 3-4, 1891. The memory sticks will be left in place on the Campus Green through Jan. 4.

CAIRNS Director Craig Howe, Ph.D., and developers of the “Takuwe” K-12 educational curriculum team will be on hand from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Saturday to share this experience with visitors. Warm beverages will be served. Inside the museum, “Takuwe” (in English, “Why”), the educational art exhibit curated by Howe about the Wounded Knee Massacre, will be open for in-depth exploration.

The focus of “Takuwe” is the 1890 massacre of Lakotas at Wounded Knee, but it does not begin or end with the killings. Its intent is to begin with positives and to close with a call to action. The exhibition is divided into seven chronological sections, which are accompanied by the artworks, poetry and songs of 46 contemporary Lakota artists. In addition to these core artists, Lakotas of all walks of life are invited to create a 5-inch square artwork for the exhibition. Students, inmates, laypersons and professional artists are contributing to this initiative and their artworks are also on display. 

Its narrative structure is based on the words of Lakotas who were there in 1890 and 1891. Their recollections and reflections guide visitors through the exhibition in seven chronological periods, beginning with Belief, which expresses the spiritual context of the Ghost Dance. Assassination focuses on the early morning killing of Sitting Bull on Dec. 15, 1890. Trek covers the journey of Spotted Elk and his people from along the Cheyenne River toward Red Cloud’s community in Pine Ridge Reservation.

The fourth section, Massacre, portrays the killing of innocent Lakota children, women and men on Monday, Dec. 29, 1890, at Wounded Knee. Interval covers the period of time from immediately after the massacre through Jan. 2, 1891. Interment concentrates on the Jan. 3-4, 1891, burial in a mass unmarked grave of the Lakotas whose bodies remained on the site. 

The final section, Proposal, offers an opportunity to reflect on the complex legacy of the massacre and looks forward to the ways in which Lakota citizens and tribes will continue to commemorate the victims of Wounded Knee. The voices of the Lakota poets and musicians can quite literally be heard in the gallery. By putting on a pair of headphones, visitors can listen to the poets recite their works and the musicians sing, or play, their songs.

“Takuwe” opened at South Dakota Art Museum on Nov. 2 and closes Feb. 6, 2019.