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"Cistemaw iyiniw ohci," A Performance by Cheryl L'Hirondelle
Candice Hopkins

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Interventions in Traditional Territories: "Cistemaw inyiniw," A Performance by Cheryl L'Hirondelle
by Candice Hopkins

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Each additional performer interacted with the community in a separate way. Joseph Naytowhow recited the story in typical Cree tradition by becoming the spirit of Cistemaw inyiniw He offered tobacco to the people he visited and alerted them to Cheryl's action. Louise Halfe chose to do a photo essay in addition to informing the community about the performance and recording their opinions of the action. Cheli Nighttraveller visited the home of an elderly man in the nearby community of Loon Lake and documented her visit with photographs.

During L'Hirondelle's performance, three radio stations, Flying Dust Radio, MBC, and CJNS, broadcasted the story of Cistemaw iyiniw in Cree as told by Harry Blackbird. While Flying Dust Radio is broadcasted to the reserve, MBC and CJNS are stations that play mainly Top 40 hits. The idea of a Cree story interrupting the regular streams of Shania Twain and 50 Cent is subversive in itself.

Each component of the performance—L'Hirondelle's running, the visits with the members of the community, and the radio broadcasts—extended public reception of the event. The visits with the community informed people of the performance, broadening her audience; the radio broadcasts ensured that the community had access to the original story; and L'Hirondelle's action physically inscribed Cistemaw iyiniw's story in the landscape of northern Saskatchewan.

The term "public art" doesn't resonate with most Native people. After all, they do not make up a large percentage of the museum audience. They certainly aren't viewed as constituting the public or even one of the more carefully defined "publics." Rather, they are part of a community. Will the community of Makwa Sahgaiehcan remember L'Hirondelle's performance as a great moment of contemporary Native public art? Probably not. However, it will resonate in the minds of those who witnessed it as an honorable act.

See Cheryl's project at http://www.ndnnrkey.net/cistemaw/


Candice Hopkins (Metis/Tlingit) is a curator and an artist. She has worked for Aboriginal organizations nationally and internationally and has been a project director for the Treaty 8 Tribal Association responsible for the development of a new Cultural and Interpretative Centre. She received her Master of Arts in curatorial studies in contemporary culture from the Center for Curatorial Studies at Bard College, where she attended on a scholarship from the National Aboriginal Achievement Foundation. She has written and presented on Aboriginal and contemporary art and curated exhibitions featuring the work of distinguished artists such as Faye HeavyShield, Elaine Reichek, Jimmie Durham and David Hammons. Hopkins is currently the Aboriginal curatorial resident at the Walter Phillips Gallery. The exhibit A Sense of Place was recently up in the Walter Phillips Gallery.

Cheryl L'Hirondelle (aka cheryl l'hirondelle waynohtew, cheryl koprek)
is an alberta born but currently a vancouver based, halfbreed (metis/cree-non
status/treaty, french, german, polish) multi/interdisciplinary artist.
Since the early 80's she has created, performed, collaborated and
presented work in a variety of artistic disciplines: performance art,
music (voice, percussion), theatre (actor/writer), performance poetry,
storytelling, video and new media.Since the early 90's she has also worked as an arts programmer, cultural strategist/activist, arts consultant and producer independently and
within the national artist-run network, first nations bands and tribal councils,
and government agencies (provincial & federal).She is currently developing performative physical endurance interventions and producing interactive net.art projects (www.ndnnrkey.net), still performs with her singing duo nikamok and is teaching first nations net.art and digital storytelling at Emily Carr Institute of Art and Design.

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