Ojibwe artist to raise community-created sculpture outside Minnesota Capitol
Posted October 12, 2020
Ojibwe artist to raise community-created sculpture outside Minnesota Capitol
October 10, 2020 8:33 p.m.
Three leaves that are part of the piece “Tree of Peace, Tree of Life, Tree of the Future” by Ojibwe artist Sharon Day, set to be unveiled outside the Minnesota Capitol on Sunday.
Courtesy of Sharon Day
As Sharon Day watched the protests and large-scale calls for change in the wake of George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police, the longtime activist felt sidelined.
“These youth who led the uprising — they brought us to this brink of state change, real change in this country. (But) those of us who have health conditions or by age — because of COVID (we) were limited in what we can do,” said Day, an artist and enrolled member of the Bois Forte Band of Ojibwe.
So Day thought of how she could make a statement, safely — how to express her thoughts and hopes for the future — and she was struck by the symbolism of a tree.
“I had written a piece of poetry some years ago about trees … and how they provide so much for us, and so I thought ‘Oh, maybe these thoughts for the future, what we want for future generations, maybe we should make leaves.’”
The artwork that resulted — a 12-foot-tall driftwood sculpture Day calls “Tree of Peace, Tree of Life, Tree of the Future” — will be raised Sunday morning outside the Minnesota Capitol, with a ceremony starting at 9 a.m. and including face coverings and social distancing.
Shortly after Day felt the tree inspiration, she just so happened to stumble upon the perfect material for her sculpture.
“I saw this beautiful weathered tree … that had washed ashore and I thought, ‘That’s the tree.’ Instead of cutting a healthy tree down, we’re going to use this tree that’s already been blessed by the water and the sun.”
Day said it was a challenge to move the large piece of driftwood.
“When we carried it from the lake, it was about a mile, and the whole thing was about 20 feet long. So we had to cut about a third of it off and figure out how to put it back together,” she said.
As part of the project, Day invited people across the country to send hundreds of homemade leaves for the tree, with messages of hope.
“Some of them are quilted, some are made from wood, some are made from paper and some of them have, in the centers, people have sewn medicines: sage, sweetgrass, cedar,” Day said.
On these leaves are written messages of hope.
“When you look at them you can see people took time to make each leaf. And while they were making each leaf they were putting in the energy that they hope and wish for. We can make that happen and that will happen,” she said.
Day said the contributions give the piece a unique energy.
Read the rest of the article: https://www.mprnews.org/story/2020/10/10/ojibwe-artist-to-raise-communitycreated-sculpture-outside-minnesota-capitol
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