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Jolene wrote…
“The term 'resurgence' can be applied to the robust recovery of Cayuga culture 
in this moment as redress for the 'burnt earth' campaign waged against these 
peoples at the birth of America… this artistic intervention seeks to reclaim a 
distinct culture space.”

Thank you Jolene for a preview of the upcoming intervention of the 
Haudenosaunee Nation near “Cayuga.” Many of us who live on this rich land of 
the Haudenosaunee are humbled by the incredible expanse of its natural 
resources.  Amidst the acreage surrounding us I realize how important our role 
of caretaker is. I am grateful for the rich fertile land and clear water that 
surround us and there are many days I feel the aura of those who planted the 
land before me. 

Can you tell our –empyre- subscribers a bit more about the artists and the work 
that you refer to?  Would love to hear a bit more. 
Best.  Renate

On 11/14/18, 10:04 AM, "[email protected] on behalf of 
Timothy Conway Murray" <[email protected] on behalf of 
[email protected]> wrote:

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    Thank you for joining us, Jolene.  It is so fantastic to share your voice 
and work with the -empyre- community.
    
    What you term as the 'resurgence' of Cayuga culture and art provides a 
crucially poignant resonance to the notions of "passage, persistence, survival" 
that frame the "Duration" theme of our month's discussion, which also is the 
theme of the 2018 Cornell Biennial in which your project participates.  Most 
telling is your juxtaposition of the "averted erasure" of Cayuga culture with 
the "hegemonic blending of culture" which far too often papers over the 
distinctness of cultural space.
    
    I think this is a point that Kate Brettkelly made in her introductory post 
last week in reflecting on her writing on "works of art by Darren Almond, 
Nicholas Mangan and Olafur Eliasson [that] have similarly centred on seemingly 
wondrous encounters with geological durations or glacial deep time. But looking 
more critically at this artistic interest in deep time, I have wondered whether 
it risks the presumption of an absolute, universal frame of reference. Does it 
presuppose a primordial time that is rather conveniently indifferent to 
histories of social inequality and subjugation? More pointedly, when we 
celebrate the deep time of earth, do we actively overlook the durations and 
experiences of indigenous peoples?" 
    
    In our conversations over the years, I recall your making similar contrasts 
between the Tuscarora reverence of the land and sustenance of indigenous corn 
in resistence to blended residues of the "burnt earth" campaign waged against 
the Cayuga and Tuscarora in our region.
    
    I'm wondering if you would mind saying a bit about how this is inflected in 
your personal artistic practice as well.
    
    Best,
    
    Tim
    
    Timothy Murray
    Director, Cornell Council for the Arts and Curator, CCA Biennial
    http://cca.cornell.edu
    Curator, Rose Goldsen Archive of New Media Art 
    http://goldsen.library.cornell.edu <http://goldsen.library.cornell.edu/>
    Professor of Comparative Literature and English
     
    B-1 West Sibley Hall
    Cornell University
    Ithaca, New York 14853
     
     
    
    On 11/13/18, 5:01 AM, "[email protected] on behalf 
of Jolene K. Rickard" <[email protected] on behalf of 
[email protected]> wrote:
    
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        Nya:weh (Thanks) to Tim Murry and Renate Ferro for inviting me to be a 
part of the -empyre-soft_skinned space. 
        My participation in Duration: Passage, Persistence, Survival is as 
convener in collaboration with artists from the GAYOGOHÓ:NÓ or Cayuga Nation 
diaspora. As noted by Tim Murry, Cornell is located within Cayuga homelands but 
does not fully recognize it's obligation to 'territory.' The Cayuga were 
dispossessed and forced from their homeland in 1779 by a systematic military 
campaign during the American Revolution known as the Clinton-Sullivan 
Expedition. The Cayuga sheltered throughout Haudenosaunee (Iroquois) Nations 
for over 229 years and have now embarked on the remarkable resistance of 
returning to their territorial space. 
                The relationship between Indigenous peoples and the United 
States is relevant but not at the core of the collaborative project with Cayuga 
artists. This tentative assemblage of these artists will be the first time 
since their forced removal that they will be coming together as "Cayuga" 
artists. The process of conversation, reclamation of Cayuga space and history 
will be at the center of a proposed installation at Akwe:kon, an Indigenous 
student residence on campus. Marking space as Cayuga will be an important 
action in this collaboration, but there isn't a distinct aesthetic Cayuga 
practice but their relationship to place is richly detailed in their language. 
The term 'resurgence' can be applied to the robust recovery of Cayuga culture 
in this moment as redress for the 'burnt earth' campaign waged against these 
peoples at the birth of America. 
                I recognize that this emblematic experience of the relationship 
between Indigenous peoples and settler states as a global condition. Indigenous 
peoples have endured the modern epoch of colonialism and are emerging from an 
averted erasure. But, at a moment when most have accepted the hegemonic 
blending of culture, this artistic intervention seeks to reclaim a distinct 
culture space. How will this return to Cayuga be read in an arts context 
insistent upon the flattening of epistemological and ontological difference? 
        
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