Tlingit installation artist, painter, printmaker, and sculptor
Tanis Maria S'eiltin (born 1951[1]) is a Tlingit installation artist, painter, printmaker, and sculptor.[2]
Early life and career
S'eiltin was born into a family of artists. She learned from her mother, who weaved Chilkat robes and sewed skins into garments.[1][2] As a child, she often visited Tlingit relatives in Haines, Alaska.[1]
S'eiltin is an associate professor and researcher of art and humanities at Fairhaven College.[3]
Works
S'eiltin uses classically indigenous materials in her art,[1] including animal pelts and bones.[5] Themes in S'eiltin's works include the impact of Western colonization,[2]postmodernism,[1] and statements of resistance and hope.[4]
One of S'eiltin's works, Hit (House in Tlingit Language), is a 2007 mixed-media installation, including video components, that includes a replica M16 rifle suspended in a 55-gallon glass tank of oil and water.[3][6] The work demonstrates themes of colonialism and toxic masculinity. The work demonstrates parallels between the Angoon bombardment and the First Gulf War, while also bringing attention to stereotypes and of Indigenous and Muslim women.[7]
On her art, S'eiltin says "I strive to create art that is aesthetically beautiful and informative, the goal is to encourage dialogue and raise awareness."[4]
^"Making Sense of Things". gormanmuseum.ucdavis.edu. October 3 โ December 15, 2006. Archived from the original on September 27, 2020. Retrieved November 9, 2019.