Monson Arts is pleased to present Always Home: Traditional Wabanaki Arts at the Monson Arts Gallery this summer. The exhibit featuring work by 17 artists from the Penobscot, Passamaquoddy, and Micmac Nations was curated by Kathleen Mundell (Cultural Resources, Inc.) with curatorial guidance from Jennifer Neptune (Penobscot Nation Museum).
Over a hundred and fifty years ago, Penobscot guide Joseph Polis introduced Henry David Thoreau to Wabanaki woods and waterways. At the end of their journey together, Thoreau asked Polis if he was glad to be home. According to Thoreau, Polis replied. “It makes no difference to me where I am.”
In reflecting on Polis’ words, Jennifer Neptune, one of the Penobscot artists featured in this exhibit, suggests: “I’m always home. It doesn’t matter if it’s Indian Island or at Moosehead Lake. We’re home when we are down at the coast picking sweet grass. We’re always home because we belong to this land, it doesn’t belong to us. We are part of it, like the salmon and the eagles and the deer and the moose, which makes it all home, which makes us responsible to all those things.”
Featured Artists:
Barry Dana
Joe “Hugga” Dana
Ganessa Bryant Frey
Gabriel Frey
Jeremy Frey
Jennifer Neptune
Peter Neptune
Stan Neptune
Niskapisuwin (Geo Neptune Parker)
Molly Neptune Parker
Reuben “Butch” Phillips
Senabeh (Roland Francis)
Donna Sanipass
Mary Sanipass
Erik Sappier
Theresa Secord
Sarah Sockbeson
Gallery Programs and Events:
June 24, 7PM – Virtual conversation with artist Barry Dana and daughter Maulian Dana, Penobscot Nation Ambassador. Click below to watch a recording of their talk:
July 17, 11-4PM – Ash basket demonstration with artist Gabriel Frey live at the Monson Arts Gallery.
All programs in conjunction with the exhibit are free and open to the public.
Always Home will be on view through October 31at the Monson Arts Gallery located at 8 Greenville Road in Monson. Gallery hours are Wed – Sun, 10-5. Funding for the exhibition was provided in part by a grant from the Maine Bicentennial Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts.