Broadway between 41st and 49th Streets
New York, NY
Start:
Mar 1, 2020
End:
Mar 31, 2020
Nightly, 11:57PM-12AM
View Public Programming
Broadway between 41st and 49th Streets
New York, NY
Start:
Mar 1, 2020
End:
Mar 31, 2020
Nightly, 11:57PM-12AM
View Public Programming
In celebration of Indigenous Peoples Day, we’ve shared a special release of She Never Dances Alone by Jeffrey Gibson, which the artist describes as “an ancestral call for strength and healing for all Indigenous people,” and in particular, “a recognition of the power of Indigenous women.” You can now view this mesmerizing Midnight Moment in full here until November 12.
Special Viewing:
Saturday, March 7, 11:30pm to Midnight
Duffy Square (46th Street and Broadway)
Join Jeffrey Gibson, Times Square Arts, the Brooklyn Museum, The Armory Show, Roberts Projects and Kavi Gupta for free, public performances by Sarah Ortegon and Joan Henry leading into the Midnight Moment. Presented by Times Square Arts, The Armory Show, Kavi Gupta, and Roberts Projects.
An artist of Choctaw and Cherokee descent, Jeffrey Gibson combines elements of traditional Native American craft with the visual languages of modernism to draw powerful personal, cultural, and historical connections between the two. Gibson’s work across painting, sculpture, and installation is invariably vibrant and visually rich. He is known for using traditional Indigenous materials, including animal hides, glass beads, and tipi poles, alongside more contemporary mediums such as video, paint and ceramics to create wearable sculptural garments, stand-alone sculptures, mixed media paintings and immersive installations.
A multi-channel video created specifically for the screens of Times Square, She Never Dances Alone (2019) is Gibson’s celebration of the Indigenous matriarchy, centering on the jingle dress dance, a powwow dance that originated with the Ojibewea tribe and is traditionally performed by women to call upon ancestors for strength, healing, and protection. As Sarah Ortegon, an acclaimed jingle dress dancer and Miss Native American USA 2013–14, performs in handmade dresses adorned with jingles or rows of ziibaaska’iganan (metal cones), the swaying colors, textures, and patterns pop against a black background and fold into kaleidoscopic abstractions. Ortegon’s image multiplies within each screen and across the plazas, creating the impression that many women have come together to dance over Times Square. The video ends with a close-up of Ortegon’s face after she has stopped dancing, calming her breath as she stares intently ahead — and at the people watching from below.
“I wanted to take this opportunity to draw attention to the importance and strength of Indigenous women. Many tribal communities were historically matriarchal and the acculturation towards patriarchal systems has caused great damage to our communities. We are currently experiencing a crisis with an overwhelming number of cases of missing and murdered Indigenous women, many of which are not investigated beyond the initial reporting. Times Square offers a huge global audience to witness this video and experience the dancing of Sarah Ortegon. It is not just about her as an individual but also the many women she represents. Having this video played in Times Square is an ancestral call for strength and healing for all Indigenous people, and a recognition of the power of Indigenous women.”
—Jeffrey Gibson
She Never Dances Alone is presented in partnership with Brooklyn Museum on the occasion of Gibson’s major solo exhibition When Fire Is Applied to a Stone It Cracks, February 14, 2020 – January 10, 2021, for which he selected objects from the Museum’s collection and archives to display alongside examples of his recent work, including garments, beaded punching bags, paintings on hide and canvas, and ceramic vessels.
Gibson will be in discussion with Eugenie Tsai as part of Armory Live at The Armory Show on March 6, 12:30pm, and his work will be on view within the fair at the booths of Roberts Projects and Kavi Gupta.
The March 7th performance and viewing is presented by Times Square Arts, The Armory Show, Roberts Projects and Kavi Gupta.
Additional credits:
Sancia Nash — Editor
William Singer — Color
In celebration of Indigenous Peoples Day, we’ve shared a special release of She Never Dances Alone by Jeffrey Gibson, which the artist describes as “an ancestral call for strength and healing for all Indigenous people,” and in particular, “a recognition of the power of Indigenous women.” You can now view this mesmerizing Midnight Moment in full here until November 12.
Special Viewing:
Saturday, March 7, 11:30pm to Midnight
Duffy Square (46th Street and Broadway)
Join Jeffrey Gibson, Times Square Arts, the Brooklyn Museum, The Armory Show, Roberts Projects and Kavi Gupta for free, public performances by Sarah Ortegon and Joan Henry leading into the Midnight Moment. Presented by Times Square Arts, The Armory Show, Kavi Gupta, and Roberts Projects.
An artist of Choctaw and Cherokee descent, Jeffrey Gibson combines elements of traditional Native American craft with the visual languages of modernism to draw powerful personal, cultural, and historical connections between the two. Gibson’s work across painting, sculpture, and installation is invariably vibrant and visually rich. He is known for using traditional Indigenous materials, including animal hides, glass beads, and tipi poles, alongside more contemporary mediums such as video, paint and ceramics to create wearable sculptural garments, stand-alone sculptures, mixed media paintings and immersive installations.
A multi-channel video created specifically for the screens of Times Square, She Never Dances Alone (2019) is Gibson’s celebration of the Indigenous matriarchy, centering on the jingle dress dance, a powwow dance that originated with the Ojibewea tribe and is traditionally performed by women to call upon ancestors for strength, healing, and protection. As Sarah Ortegon, an acclaimed jingle dress dancer and Miss Native American USA 2013–14, performs in handmade dresses adorned with jingles or rows of ziibaaska’iganan (metal cones), the swaying colors, textures, and patterns pop against a black background and fold into kaleidoscopic abstractions. Ortegon’s image multiplies within each screen and across the plazas, creating the impression that many women have come together to dance over Times Square. The video ends with a close-up of Ortegon’s face after she has stopped dancing, calming her breath as she stares intently ahead — and at the people watching from below.
“I wanted to take this opportunity to draw attention to the importance and strength of Indigenous women. Many tribal communities were historically matriarchal and the acculturation towards patriarchal systems has caused great damage to our communities. We are currently experiencing a crisis with an overwhelming number of cases of missing and murdered Indigenous women, many of which are not investigated beyond the initial reporting. Times Square offers a huge global audience to witness this video and experience the dancing of Sarah Ortegon. It is not just about her as an individual but also the many women she represents. Having this video played in Times Square is an ancestral call for strength and healing for all Indigenous people, and a recognition of the power of Indigenous women.”
—Jeffrey Gibson
She Never Dances Alone is presented in partnership with Brooklyn Museum on the occasion of Gibson’s major solo exhibition When Fire Is Applied to a Stone It Cracks, February 14, 2020 – January 10, 2021, for which he selected objects from the Museum’s collection and archives to display alongside examples of his recent work, including garments, beaded punching bags, paintings on hide and canvas, and ceramic vessels.
Gibson will be in discussion with Eugenie Tsai as part of Armory Live at The Armory Show on March 6, 12:30pm, and his work will be on view within the fair at the booths of Roberts Projects and Kavi Gupta.
The March 7th performance and viewing is presented by Times Square Arts, The Armory Show, Roberts Projects and Kavi Gupta.
Additional credits:
Sancia Nash — Editor
William Singer — Color
The Brooklyn Museum contains one of the nation's most comprehensive and wide-ranging collections enhanced by a distinguished record of exhibitions, scholarship, and service to the public. The Museum's vast holdings span 5,000 years of human creativity from cultures in every corner of the globe. Collection highlights include the ancient Egyptian holdings, renowned for objects of the highest world-class quality, and the arts of the Americas collection, which is unrivaled in its diverse range from Native American art and artifacts and Spanish colonial painting, to 19th- and early 20th-century American painting, sculpture, and decorative objects. The Museum is also home to the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art, which is dedicated to the study and exhibition of feminist art and is the only curatorial center of its kind. The Brooklyn Museum is both a leading cultural institution and a community museum dedicated to serving a wide-ranging audience. Located in the heart of Brooklyn, the Museum welcomes and celebrates the diversity of its home borough and city. brooklynmuseum.org
The Armory Show is New York City’s premier art fair and a leading cultural destination for discovering and collecting the world’s most important 20th- and 21st-century art. The Armory Show features presentations by leading international galleries, innovative artist commissions, and dynamic public programs. Since its founding in 1994, The Armory Show has served as a nexus for the international art world, inspiring dialogue, discovery, and patronage in the visual arts. Jeffrey Gibson has shown work at The Armory Show previously, including a large installation in the Platform section in 2018. thearmoryshow.com
Broadway between 41st and 49th Streets
New York, NY
Nightly, 11:57PM-12AM
Photos by Maria Baranova
Learn More About
Jeffrey Gibson
Learn More About
Jeffrey Gibson
Learn More About
Jeffrey Gibson