The Dancers Arrive
Rick Bartow, Wiyot / American, born 1946
Wiyot
California culture
2006
Acrylic on panel
Overall: 20 1/16 × 16 1/16 × 7/8 in. (51 × 40.8 × 2.3 cm)
Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Purchased through the Hood Museum of Art Acquisitions Fund
© Rick Bartow
2008.6.3
Portfolio / Series Title
The Ceremony that Never Was
Geography
Place Made: Table Bluff Reservation, United States, North America
Period
21st century
Object Name
Painting
Research Area
Native American
Painting
Native American: California Culture
Not on view
Inscriptions
Signed and dated, in paint, lower right: B[illegible script] 06; stamped, in ink, on reverse, center: [illegible upside down stampt]; titled, in ink, on reverse, center: # 3 / a Painting of / The ceremony / That never was / or / the dancers / arrive; printed, in ink, on label affixed to reverse, lower right: The Dancers Arrive, Or A Painting of a Ceremony / That Never Was #3 [3 written in ink over print] / Rick Bartow / acrylic on panel, polyptych 3 of 4 / 2006 / Inv # 1762 20 x 16"each, 20x64"polyptych / Froelick Gallery / 817 SW SECOND AVENUE, PORTLAND, OREGON 97204 / www.froelickgallery.com; inscribed, in ink, on reverse, bottom edge: FG 1762 RIGHT MIDDLE 3/4
Label
Pilgrimage is not always about place. In Native American traditions, ceremony often describes the practice of traditional rituals tied to both body and spirit. Sacred events, ceremonies allow for spiritual transformations that may be interpreted as acts of metaphorical pilgrimage. The body may remain, but in a metaphysical sense, ritual allows individuals to enter new states and stages without changing physical location. Across these four paintings, Rick Bartow creates a liminal atmosphere and the sense that change is underway. The ghostly forms evoke movement and depict humans in states of transformation.
What power does pilgrimage have to transcend the material realm? Bartow found art, like pilgrimages and the traditional rituals that are his subject, to be a way of healing from the traumas of serving in the Vietnam War, saying, "I have drawn myself sane."
From the 2022 exhibition A Space for Dialogue 108, Journeys Beyond: Faces and Forms of Pilgrimage, curated by Emily Charland '19, Erbe Intern
Course History
NAS 30.1, ARTH 17, Modern Native American Art History, Joyce Szabo, Summer 2013
SART 25.01, Painting I, Tom Ferrara, Fall 2021
SART 31/SART 72, Painting II/III, Tom Ferrara, Fall 2021
SART 76, Senior Seminar, Enrico Riley, Winter 2022
SART 31, SART 72, Painting II/III, Tom Ferrara, Summer 2022
SART 25.01, Painting I, Danielle Genadry, Summer 2022
Exhibition History
A Space for Dialogue 108, Journeys Beyond: Faces and Forms of Pilgrimage, Alvin P. Gutman Gallery, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover New Hampshire, August 27 - October 22, 2022.
Native American Art at Dartmouth: Highlights from the Hood Museum of Art, Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, October 8, 2011-March 12, 2012.
Publication History
George P. Horse Capture, Sr., Joe D. Horse Capture, Joseph M. Sanchez, et al., Native American Art at Dartmouth: Hightlights from the Hood Museum of Art, Hanover: Trustees of Dartmouth College, 2011, ill. on p. 47 and p. 147, no. 45.
Provenance
Stonington Gallery, Seattle, Washington; sold to present collection, 2008.
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