Item number 2004.4 from the MAA: University of Cambridge.
Item number 2004.4 from the MAA: University of Cambridge.
This page shows all the information we have about this item. Both the institution that physically holds this item, and RRN members have contributed the knowledge on this page. You’re looking at the item record provided by the holding institution. If you scroll further down the page, you’ll see the information from RRN members, and can share your own knowledge too.
The RRN processes the information it receives from each institution to make it more readable and easier to search. If you’re doing in-depth research on this item, be sure to take a look at the Data Source tab to see the information exactly as it was provided by the institution.
These records are easy to share because each has a unique web address. You can copy and paste the location from your browser’s address bar into an email, word document, or chat message to share this item with others.
This information was automatically generated from data provided by MAA: University of Cambridge. It has been standardized to aid in finding and grouping information within the RRN. Accuracy and meaning should be verified from the Data Source tab.
Limited edition print Run World Run by Clarissa Hudson, a Tlingit, Northwest Coast, artist 2002. The print was adapted from a collage by Hudson in the Tlingit World SeriesÂ. It features a characteristically-styled Northwest Coast figure running around a spiraling pattern composed of intertwining details from a Northwest Coast button blanket with European derived maps of the region.
Purchased by Anita Herle at The Inuit Gallery in Vancouver. (bio): Anita Herle, CUMMA Senior Curator of Anthroplogy(bio): Clarissa Hudson.Button blankets, symbols of wealth worn at potlatches and other ceremonial occasions, carry crest designs which identify the wearer with their clan and thereby associated resources. The artist highlights a multiplicity of views through her technique of zooming in and out from the close details of the button blanket to the distant views of European derived maps, so crucial to exploration and colonial expansion. The design was produced in conjunction with the Vancouver International Marathon.Exhibited in Making things Public: Atmospheres of Democracy at ZKM Centre for Art and Media in Karlsruhe, Germany (20 March - 3 October 2005), curated by Bruno Latour and Peter Weibel. Included in a section entitled Transforming Things: Ats and Politics on the Northwest Coast by CUMAA curator Anita Herle. See catalogue entry in Latour and Weibel (eds). 2005. Making Things Public, Atmospheres of Democracy. ZKM and MIT Press. pp. 132- 141. Detail of Hudsons print illustrated on p. 140.
This data has been provided to the RRN by the MAA: University of Cambridge. We've used it to provide the information on the Data tab.
Limited edition print Run World Run by Clarissa Hudson, a Tlingit, Northwest Coast, artist 2002. The print was adapted from a collage by Hudson in the Tlingit World SeriesÂ. It features a characteristically-styled Northwest Coast figure running around a spiraling pattern composed of intertwining details from a Northwest Coast button blanket with European derived maps of the region.
Purchased by Anita Herle at The Inuit Gallery in Vancouver. (bio): Anita Herle, CUMMA Senior Curator of Anthroplogy(bio): Clarissa Hudson.Button blankets, symbols of wealth worn at potlatches and other ceremonial occasions, carry crest designs which identify the wearer with their clan and thereby associated resources. The artist highlights a multiplicity of views through her technique of zooming in and out from the close details of the button blanket to the distant views of European derived maps, so crucial to exploration and colonial expansion. The design was produced in conjunction with the Vancouver International Marathon.Exhibited in Making things Public: Atmospheres of Democracy at ZKM Centre for Art and Media in Karlsruhe, Germany (20 March - 3 October 2005), curated by Bruno Latour and Peter Weibel. Included in a section entitled Transforming Things: Ats and Politics on the Northwest Coast by CUMAA curator Anita Herle. See catalogue entry in Latour and Weibel (eds). 2005. Making Things Public, Atmospheres of Democracy. ZKM and MIT Press. pp. 132- 141. Detail of Hudsons print illustrated on p. 140.
Let the RRN community answer your questions
With an account, you can ask other users a question about this item. Request an Account
Share your knowlege of this item with the RRN community
With an account, you can submit information about this item and have it visible to all users and institutions on the RRN. Request an Account