CORVALLIS, Ore. — An outdoor museum exhibition and series of talks recognizing native Kalapuya history and land stewardship in Oregon is coming to Oregon State University starting May 11.
“This IS Kalapuyan Land” first opened at the Five Oaks Museum in Portland in 2019. The exhibition was guided by Five Oaks’ first guest curator, Steph Littlebird Fogel (Grand Ronde, Kalapuya) in collaboration with several Indigenous historians, artists and cultural experts, including OSU College of Liberal Arts instructor David G. Lewis (Chinook, Santiam, Takelma, Grand Ronde).
The exhibition prompts critical thinking around representation of Indigenous history and identity in non-Indigenous institutions. Five Oaks Museum later added a series of signs declaring “This IS Kalapuyan Land” that can be placed as pop-up exhibits in outdoor locations.
An OSU advisory committee started working last year to bring the exhibition to Corvallis, and created three new signs to accompany seven signs from the original Five Oaks exhibit. The signs were designed by OSU student Chanti Maῆon and will be displayed throughout the Corvallis campus and in OSU research forests beginning in mid-May.
“The exhibit of signs will be there to remind people that this is and always will be Kalapuya Land,” said advisory committee member Luhui Whitebear (Coastal Band Chumash), assistant director of OSU’s Native American Longhouse Eena Haws and an anthropology and ethnic studies instructor. “As a land grant university, we at Oregon State have the responsibility to teach people that and to keep it centered in the work we do.”
Also on the advisory committee were Julia Bradshaw, associate professor of art and art history; Lewis, anthropology and ethnic studies instructor; Marion Rossi, associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts; Chet Udell, assistant professor of biological and ecological engineering; and Stephen Fitzgerald, professor and extension specialist and the director of OSU research forests.
In addition to the sign exhibit, OSU will hold a series of three talks in May:
"This IS Kalapuyan Land" is made possible through partnerships between the Five Oaks Museum, OSU’s NAL Eena Haws; the School of Language, Culture, and Society; the School of Arts and Communication; and the College of Forestry. A video tour, event photos and additional information about the project are available at: https://dce.oregonstate.edu/nal/kalapuyanland.
About the OSU College of Liberal Arts: The College of Liberal Arts includes the fine and performing arts, humanities and social sciences, making it one of the largest and most diverse colleges at OSU. The college's research and instructional faculty members contribute to the education of all university students and provide national and international leadership, creativity and scholarship in their academic disciplines.
Erin Sneller, 541-737-5592, [email protected]
Julia Bradshaw, [email protected]; Luhui Whitebear [email protected]; David Lewis, [email protected]
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