Published: May 11, 2017

The Jerry Crail Johnson Earth Sciences & Map Library at the Â鶹ӰԺ will host a new exhibition highlighting art and maps that addresses the history of Indigenous peoples’ lands in the UnitedÌýStates. It is on display Ìýthrough July 7.

The exhibit centersÌýaround Heart Mapping, a series of mixed media works on paper by Melanie Yazzie, CU Â鶹ӰԺ professor of art and art history and head of printmaking. Yazzie’s work evokes the American landscape as seen from above, in order to honor the vast breadth of Native homelands lost to Euro-American settlement. She notes, “I hope to inspire others to know that we were here before and are still present on this land we call the United States.â€

In addition, the exhibit focuses on the difficulty of accurately mapping lands that were coercively transferred over time, and whose boundaries are still disputed. Maps of Indigenous peoples’ distribution throughout the history of North America, detailed turn-of-the-century reservation maps, educational maps by Native American publishers, and tourist maps, offer a thought-provoking informational complement to Yazzie’s artwork.

Guest essayist Sarah Krakoff, Raphael J. Moses Professor of Law at University of Colorado Law School, offers historical context to government-published maps in the exhibit, as well as commentary on the current state of Indian Land law.

A gallery talk and reception for Yazzie will take place in the Earth Sciences and Map Library. Visiting artist Faith McManus, art teacher at Northtec Education Institute in Northland, New Zealand, will be joining Yazzie in discussing “.â€ÌýÌý

This exhibition is held in conjunction withÌý, themed “The Art in Maps.â€