Areas of Research/Interest: Research with Aboriginal people in Australia, concentrating on Western Desert people. He is interested in exchange theory and material culture, the intercultural production and circulation of culture, in contemporary art worlds, in identity and personhood, and in how these are related to theories of value and practices of signification.
Select Publications:
"The Complicity of Cultural Production: The Contingencies of Performance in Globalizing Museum Practices." In Ivan Karp and Corinne Kratz, eds. Museum Frictions. Duke University Press. Pp 505-536. 2006.
Painting Culture: The Making of an Aboriginal High Art. Durham: Duke University Press. 2002
The Empire of Things: Regimes of Value and Material Culture. Edited volume. Santa Fe: SAR Press. 2001 " Aesthetics and Practice: A Local Art History of Pintupi Painting." In H. Morphy and M. Boles, eds. The Art of Place: Dialogues with the Kluge-Ruhe Collection of Australian Aboriginal Art. Seattle: University of Washington Press. and G. Marcus, eds. 1999.
"Locating Ethnographic Practice: Romance, Reality, and Politics in the Outback." American Ethnologist, 15: 609-24. 1988.
Current News / Projects This year saw a number of Aboriginal art events in the area. In January, I had the chance to speak in a massive event at Donna Karan’s Urban Zen Center, organized by Lisa Fox as part of Australia’s “G’Day USA” promotion. This event, however, was a fund-raiser for a proponent of Aboriginal children’s health, Fiona Stanley – a former Australian of the Year. Quite an extravaganza, really, with Hugh Jackman flying in to host the fundraising dinner, Geoffrey Gurrumul singing a song for us, and Baz Luhrmann speaking about the making of his film epic, Australia. A noted Australian fashion photographer, Russell James, put together a collaboration with a Broome-based Indigenous artist, Clifton Beudurry, that was the mainstay of the event. The events were a demonstration of the ways in which Indigenous art is embedded in politics, health, and cultural respect, so while I gave a lecture as part of this event, I felt I had never left the ever-globalizing world of Indigenous art’s circulation, which has been my subject of study!! I gained a good deal of cultural capital from students with being part of Baz Luhrmann’s scene, merely a side benefit. In February, this Australian visitation continued. The exhibition of early Papunya Tula painting, “Icons of the Desert,” opened at the Herbert Johnson Museum of Art at Cornell. I went there to give a lecture, but just as much to hang out with some of my first Pintupi friends – Bobby West Tjupurrula, Joseph Tjaru Tjapaltjarri, Ray James Tjangala. They are all now painters for the Papunya Tula Artists cooperative, but they were boys and young men when I first met them, and we’ve known each other now for 36 years. Lucas Bessire took some time off from his dissertation writing and came up to Cornell to help me document the men’s visit and their production of a ground-work installation for the Cornell exhibition. Danny Fisher, who is on a post-doc up there, did the sound. The production took three days, and was quite spectacular. After the symposium and opening of the exhibition, the Pintupi painters and the Papunya Tula entourage who came to help them all stayed at the Washington Square Hotel, and Bobby, Joseph and Ray got to meet my daughter for the first time. To them, of course, she is Napangarti – based on her kinship classification through me. It was an honor to share the stage with Bobby in Ithaca, but a greater pleasure to be able to return some hospitality after all these years. Lucas was given a kinship designation as well, since he was so simpatico with Aboriginal style. |
