The James Gallery

The James Gallery The Amie and Tony James Gallery brings artists and scholars into public dialogue on topics of mutual

The Inter-Asian Perspectives Work Group’s first graduate conference “When is Asia Modern? Negotiating Borders of Moderni...
04/27/2026

The Inter-Asian Perspectives Work Group’s first graduate conference “When is Asia Modern? Negotiating Borders of Modernisms” will be held at the James Gallery, CUNY Graduate Center on May 1, 2026. Please RSVP via the link in our bio.

Asian modern art has long been framed through a Western art-historical chronology, locating its “beginning” in the late nineteenth to early twentieth century—precisely the moment of intensified encounters with the West and the imposition of Eurocentric models of modernity onto Asia. Recent scholarship across the humanities has begun to unsettle this timeline: some push the chronology backward to examine early articulations of Asian modernity in mercantile networks and imperial formations; others push it forward to engage shared global histories of the post, i.e., postcolonial, post-imperial, post-socialist.

To propose an alternative approach to thinking about Asia Modern, we ask: how do Asian modernisms emerge through the negotiation of borders? Here, borders may be understood as Cartographic Borders—those drawn and redrawn in nation-building, imperial expansion, or decolonization; Cultural Borders—those that define, delimit, or delegitimize certain formations of groups, ideas, practices, etc.; and/or Aesthetic Borders—the negotiations of style, medium, and form that highlight, contest, or blur distinctions and affinities within and across artistic traditions.

Rather than recasting the Euro-American centers as the primary axis through which these borders are negotiated, we invite papers that consider intra-Asian encounters as sites of emerging Asian modernisms. By examining how these different borders are made, crossed, and reconfigured, we collectively explore alternative imaginaries of the Asia Modern.

Short lunchtime tours led by GC doctoral studentsThursday, April 16th, 12 p.m.Kerry DoranPh.D. Program in Art History
04/14/2026

Short lunchtime tours led by GC doctoral students
Thursday, April 16th, 12 p.m.
Kerry Doran
Ph.D. Program in Art History

Joseph M. Pierce is Associate Professor in the Department of Hispanic Languages and Literature and the Founding Director...
04/14/2026

Joseph M. Pierce is Associate Professor in the Department of Hispanic Languages and Literature and the Founding Director of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative at Stony Brook University. He is the author of two books, Argentine Intimacies: Q***r Kinship in an Age of Splendor, 1890-1910 (SUNY Press, 2019) and Speculative Relations: Indigenous Worlding and Repair (Duke University Press, 2025). He co-edited Políticas del amor: Derechos sexuales y escrituras disidentes en el Cono Sur (Cuarto Propio, 2018) as well as the 2021 special issue of Gay and Le***an Studies Quarterly, “Q***r/Cuir Américas: Translation, Decoloniality, and the Incommensurable,” and has published work in Revista Hispánica Moderna, Critical Ethnic Studies, Latin American Research Review, and Art Journal, as well as in popular outlets such as Hyperallergic, TruthOut, and Indian Country Today. Along with S.J. Norman (Wiradjuri) he is co-curator of the performance series Knowledge of Wounds, and in 2024-2025 he was a Ford Foundation Scholar in Residence at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). He is a citizen of the Cherokee Nation.

Joseph will participate in the conversation Visual Sovereignty with Jolene Richard, Alan Michelson, and Wanda Nanibush for This Portrait is NOT an Indian Wed, Apr 15, 2026 4:00 PM-8:00 PM

Jolene Rickard is an Associate Professor at Cornell University in the departments of History of Art & Visual Studies, an...
04/13/2026

Jolene Rickard is an Associate Professor at Cornell University in the departments of History of Art & Visual Studies, and the former Director of the American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program 2008-2020 (AIISP). She is a visual historian, artist and curator interested in the intersection of Indigenous art, cultural theory and the forces of settler colonialism. Her research centers on the expression of multiple sovereignties within Indigenous art and culture globally.

Jolene Rickard has been at the forefront of comparative understandings of global Indigenous art with research projects in the Americas, Australia, and Aotearoa (New Zealand). Her work bridges the fields of Native American and Indigenous Studies, Settler Colonial Studies and the discipline of Art History. Focused on the complication of sovereignty as a political, theoretical and activist action, Rickard investigates anti-colonial artistic strategies, place-based knowledges and ontologies.

Jolene will participation in the conversation Visual Sovereignty with Alan Michelson, Joseph Pierce and Wanda Nanibush for This Portrait is NOT an Indian Wed, Apr 15, 2026 4:00 PM-8:00 PM at Proshansky Auditorium, CUNY Graduate Center, 365 5th Ave, NYC.

New York- and Toronto-based Cree artist Kent Monkman sums up the history of performing ‘Indian’ in The Emergence of a Le...
04/08/2026

New York- and Toronto-based Cree artist Kent Monkman sums up the history of performing ‘Indian’ in The Emergence of a Legend (2006). In a series of five studio portraits emulating daguerrotypes, Monkman poses as his persona/alter ego Miss Chief Eagle Testickle, adapting a variety of guises based on real and imagined personages—from Catlin’s gallery to vaudeville, Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show to Hollywood. Monkman simultaneously makes this history visible and qu**rs it by applying a two-spirit lens that undermines colonialism’s imposition of gender normativity. —Wanda Nanibush

Kent will be participating in This Portrait is NOT an Indian Wed, Apr 15, 2026 4:00 PM-8:00 PM

Mohawk artist Alan Michelson uses rare footage from this parade as the basis for Pehin Hanska Ktepi (they killed long ha...
04/07/2026

Mohawk artist Alan Michelson uses rare footage from this parade as the basis for Pehin Hanska Ktepi (they killed long hair) (2021). The artist duplicates and loops the film to play counterclockwise (the Mohawk ceremonial direction), and projects it onto a red blanket in reference to the Lakota winter count.7 The title of Michelson’s work is taken from the winter count entry for 1876 and names some of the warriors present: Lone Wolf, White Horse, Black Whetstone, Limpy, Pine, Hollow Wood, Sun Bear, Kills Night, Fast Walker, Dog Friend, Beaver Heart, Shoots Walking, Young Hawk, and Little Moon. Crow scout White Man Runs Him was present, representing the seventh calvary. Michelson takes an event that often celebrates Custer as a martyr and centers the First Nations point of view of westward expansion as land theft and attempted cultural eradication. —Wanda Nanibush

Alan will be participating in This Portrait is NOT an Indian Wed, Apr 15, 2026 4:00 PM-8:00 PM

Portland-based Diné artist Demian DinéYazhi’ explores the connection between embodiment, performativity, politics and po...
04/02/2026

Portland-based Diné artist Demian DinéYazhi’ explores the connection between embodiment, performativity, politics and poetics. An Infected Sunset (2018) is a book length poem that is also a performance and, in Sovereign Acts III, a series of visual fragments. Part of the artistic strength of DinéYazhi’s work is a strategy of care and construction, coupled with the ability to name what is going on with honesty and humility: the constant police executions of Black men and women that gave birth to Black Lives Matter in 2013, the massacre of 49 people at the gay nightclub Pulse in Florida in 2016, and the resistance at Standing Rock to the threat of pipelines on Native Land in 2016. He shows us how decolonial love, community resistance, q***r intimacies and Indigenous ways of being can hold us into the future. —Wanda Nanibush

will be performing An Infected Sunset performance with Rain from Heaven as part of This Portrait is NOT an Indian Wed, Apr 15, 2026 4:00 PM-8:00 PM

We’re thrilled to announce This Portrait is NOT an Indian, a day of talks and performances event schedule: Wanda Nanibus...
03/31/2026

We’re thrilled to announce This Portrait is NOT an Indian, a day of talks and performances event schedule:

Wanda Nanibush Sovereign Acts

Kent Monkman The Emergence of a Legend

Jackson Polys Performing ‘Indian’

Visual Sovereignty with Jolene Rickard, Alan Michelson, Joseph Pierce, Wanda Nanibush

An Infected Sunset performance by Demian DineYazhi’ with Rain from Heaven

This Portrait is NOT an Indian is taking place Wednesday, April 15, 2026 from 4:00 PM–8:00 PM at Proshansky Auditorium, CUNY Graduate Center, 365 5th Ave, NYC.

Register at https://centerforthehumanities.org/event/this-portrait-is-not-an-indian/

Image: Cara Romero, TV Indians, 2017. Inkjet print. Image courtesy of the artist.

More photos from our opening reception for Sovereign Acts III curated by Wanda Nanibush.The exhibition runs now through ...
03/27/2026

More photos from our opening reception for Sovereign Acts III curated by Wanda Nanibush.

The exhibition runs now through July 17th, Tuesday through Friday from 12pm to 6pm.

The gallery will be closed Wednesday April 1 through Thursday April 9, reopening Friday April 10.

Photo Credit: Alex Irklievski images 1 through 4
Photo Credit: James Gallery images 5 through 8

TOMORROW NIGHT! (3/24) 6:00pm to 8:00pmOpening reception for Sovereign Acts III, Curated by Wanda NanibushSovereign Acts...
03/23/2026

TOMORROW NIGHT! (3/24) 6:00pm to 8:00pm

Opening reception for Sovereign Acts III, Curated by Wanda Nanibush

Sovereign Acts III is the latest iteration of ongoing research into the relationship between performance, identity and contemporary Indigenous art. Contemporary artists take up this relationship by creating self-representations in theatre, music, powwow, ceremony, and visual arts. In Sovereign Acts III, the artists—Rebecca Belmore, Lori Blondeau, Demian DinéYahzi’, Martine Gutierrez, Robert Houle, James Luna, Alan Michelson, Kent Monkman, Shelley Niro, Cara Romero, Jeff Thomas, and Hulleah Tsinhahjinnie—create performances, photographs and installations to challenge ideas of normative and static identity. They use a variety of aesthetic strategies, including reenactment, remixing, memorialization, mimicry, parody, masquerade, and portraiture, underscoring the interdisciplinary nature of Indigenous art. At the heart of Sovereign Acts is a recuperation of captive and stage performers’ agency from the 1500s to the 1960s and their place within art history.

Image: Kent Monkman, The Emergence of a Legend (2006). Image courtesy of the artist.

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Wednesday 12pm - 8pm
Thursday 12pm - 8pm
Friday 12pm - 6pm
Saturday 12pm - 6pm
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