John Hitchcock

Bury the Hatchet: A Prayer for My P’ah-Be
 

Website:

www.hybridpress.net 
hybridpress@gmail.com 

Artist Statement:

Bury the Hatchet: A Prayer for My P’ah-Be is artist John Hitchcock’s mixed-media, cross-disciplinary, multisensory installation. Hitchcock combines his interests in printmaking, Rock ‘n’ Roll, and Kiowa and Comanche history into one visual expression that offers a re-telling of the narrative of the American Frontier. Working from the theme of the Buffalo Bill Wild West Show, Bury the Hatchet explores issues of assimilation, acculturation, and indoctrination through oral history and music. Bury the Hatchet develops a shared language to interrogate historic and modern institutions to prompt a re-definition and re-imagining of our present reality. 

The visual and sound recordings in the exhibition work together to challenge western perspectives of the supremacy of the written word by reinforcing Indigenous views of oral history passed on from generation to generation through storytelling. (collapse text / read more) 

Sound recordings include the artist on pedal steel guitar with soundscapes of cello, clarinet, accordion, and guitars by the band The Stolen Sea. In addition, Jason Cutnose (Kiowa,1967-2015) narrates a story about the Cutthroat Gap massacre in the Wichita Mountains of Oklahoma, Juanita Pahdopony (Comanche) records a Comanche prayer, Hitchcock’s grandfather Saukwaukee John Dussome Reid (Kiowa, 1912-1996) tells a story of the old days on the Southern Plains, and soprano Catlin Mead sings an operatic reinterpretation of Cutnose’s stories. Finally, Intertribal War Dance Songs, recorded in 1978 on the Johnny Reid (Kiowa) and Peggy Reid (Comanche) Dance Ground, make up the soundscape. Video images include War Dancers in Medicine Park, Oklahoma, and buffalo images recorded in the Wichita Mountain Wildlife Refuge by Emily Arthur. The exhibition has an accompanying limited-edition 12-inch vinyl album, CD, and set of letterpress prints available at Sunday Night records: sundaynightrecords.com http://sundaynightrecords.com/ 

Originally organized by the Missoula Art Museum and curated by John Calsbeek, Associate Curator, and Brandon Reintjes, Senior Curator. Organized in Portland by Kathleen Ash-Milby, Curator of Native American Art.  

Biography:

John Hitchcock is an Artist, Professor of Art and Associate Dean of Arts at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Professor Hitchcock has served as Faculty Director of The Studio Learning Community and Art Department Graduate Chair. He has taught printmaking at UW-Madison since 2001. Prior to that he was at the University of Minnesota, Morris. He holds a Master of Fine Arts degree from Texas Tech University. (collapse text / read more) 

Hitchcock is an award-winning artist who uses the print medium with its long history of commenting on social and political issues to explore his relationships to community, land, and culture. Hitchcock’s artwork consists of abstract representations, mythological hybrid creatures (buffalo, Owl, horse, deer) and military weaponry (tanks, bombs and helicopters). His artworks are based on his childhood memories and stories of growing up in the Wichita Mountains of Oklahoma on Comanche Tribal lands next to the US field artillery military base Ft Sill.  Many of the images are interpretations of stories told by his Kiowa/Comanche grandparents and abstract representations influenced by beadwork, land, and culture. 

Hitchcock has been the recipient of The Robert Rauschenberg Foundation Artistic Innovation and Collaboration grant, New York; Jerome Foundation Grant, Minnesota; the Creative Arts Award, Emily Mead Baldwin Award in the Creative Arts and the Kellett Mid-Career Award at the University of Wisconsin. Hitchcock’s artwork has been exhibited at numerous venues including the International Print Center New York, New York; Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Santa Fe, New Mexico; Museum of Wisconsin Arts, West Bend, Wisconsin; The Rauschenberg Project Space, New York, New York; “Air, Land, Seed” on the occasion of the Venice Biennale 54th International Art at the University of Ca' Foscari, Venice, Italy. Solo exhibition includes the American Culture Center in Shanghai, Shanghai, China; Portland Art Museum, Portland, Oregon; Missoula Art Museum, Missoula, Montana; Mulvane Art Museum, Topeka, Kansas; Plains Art Museum, Fargo, North Dakota, The Museum of Contemporary Native Arts, Santa Fe, New Mexico; American Indian Community House Gallery, New York, New York; North Dakota Museum of Art, Grand Forks, North Dakota. 

Click here to purchase Bury the Hatchet Exhibition Catalog

 


Lake Lawtonka, 2017 



Rabbit Hill, 2018 

Flatlander: Belonging to the Land
Series of 12 works on paper: 2017-2018 
30x22-inch prints, framed 36x28 inches 
$3000 each, framed  

Above is a selection of 2 works from the series. To view all 12 works, please visit or contact the Horton Gallery. 


The Protectors 

The Protectors is a screen print installation using multiple screen-printed images of bison skulls mounted on a background of Naugahyde pelts. The pelt forms suggest landmasses, and each element connects to the environment through form, placement, and symbol. 


Rainy Mountain, Falling Star


 


Flatlander Sketchbook (2017)
48 pages, ink and watercolor on Indian handmade paper 11 x 17 inches 

Comanche Poem


 


 

The Protector 
Photo by: Slikati Photography 

Taxidermy buffalo head and fifteen 12x12 inch Bury the Hatchet record album covers 

Cutthroat Gap


 

 

Bury the Hatchet double album and letterpress prints $150 (edition 100) includes, 2 white vinyl records consisting of 10 songs, 1 screen-printed cover page (gold ink on black paper), 4 separate letterpress prints inserted into the album, album insert with text, and special cd insert consisting of Dohasan (When They Attack) Performed by Caitlin Mead and Hannah Edlen with Nate Meng. 


 


Buffalo Running  
Two buffalo skulls and video projection of 1883 Eadweard Muybridge film 


Lone Wolf