THE TRIENNIAL 2025
Nicholas Galanin
I think it goes like this (pick yourself up), 2025
Bronze, steel pedestal
Multidisciplinary artist Nicholas Galanin centers Indigenous creativity and political engagement, rooted in responsibility to Land and culture.
I think it goes like this (pick yourself up) is a monumental bronze sculpture cast from chopped-up imitation totems. The bronze logs form a kneeling figure, gathering itself from a pile. The form reflects damage to Indigenous culture and technology inflicted by colonization. The work acknowledges the difficulty of repair following generations of outside interference and homogenization of culture and settler-colonial fantasy. The Indonesian carved tropical wood cast in bronze is twice removed from the Tlingit practice of carving Red Cedar totems. I think it goes like this (pick yourself up) uses material translation to communicate broadly: bronze casting is respected and revered in colonial contexts for asserting importance via monumental sculpture. As the permanence of bronze monuments celebrating violence, subjugation, and colonization is contested, Galanin engages critically and cross-culturally with traditions of permanence and their purpose. Using the sculptural language of permanence differently, Galanin insists on self-determination, self-representation, and relentless continuance for Indigenous peoples.
Visible 24/7
Evans Way Park
1 Evans Way
Boston, MA 02115
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Nicholas Galanin
b. 1979, based in Alaska
Examining the complexities of contemporary Indigenous identity, culture, and representation, Nicholas Galanin works from his experience as a Lingít and Unangax artist. Embedding incisive observation and reflection into his oftentimes provocative work, he aims to redress the widespread misappropriation of Indigenous visual culture, the impact of colonialism, as well as collective amnesia. Galanin reclaims narrative and creative agency, while demonstrating contemporary Indigenous art as a continually evolving practice.
Nicholas Galanin’s work engages contemporary culture from his perspective rooted in connection to land. He embeds incisive observation into his work, investigating intersections of culture and concept in form, image and sound. Galanin's works embody critical thought as vessels of knowledge, culture and technology - inherently political, generous, unflinching, and poetic. Galanin engages past, present and future to expose intentionally obscured collective memory and barriers to the acquisition of knowledge. His works critique commodification of culture, while contributing to the continuum of Tlingit art. Galanin employs materials and processes that expand dialogue on Indigenous artistic production, and how culture can be carried. His work is in numerous public and private collections and exhibited worldwide.