(Above: Waccamaw Recognition. 30" x 38". Individual letters clipped from new and vintage ephemera gelled to the surface of a machine embroidered art quilt coated with UV filtering epoxy. The text was taken from the May 5, 2005 concurrent House of Representatives and Senate resolution. Click on any image to enlarge.)
For the past few years I've worked with Bullets and Bandaids, a non-profit that connects veterans and civilians through a unique process the that involves a veteran's recorded interview being shared with a writer. Then, the resulting essay is shared with a visual artist. More than three hundred people from fifteen different countries have participated. Four books have been published to share the essays and artwork. I've written several essays and made three artworks. Now, Volume 5 is underway and I was asked to create an artwork from the essay written by my friend Dr. Ed Madden about Chief Buster Hatcher.
(Above: Detail of Waccamaw Recognition.)I thought long and hard as to how best to approach an artwork. All sorts of ideas presented themselves in my mind. Many included Native imagery and symbolism but the nagging voice from the back of my brain said, "Don't do it! You could easily be accused of cultural appropriation!"
(Above: Waccamaw Recognition as seen at an angle while hanging on my north facing brick wall. The lighting was such that reflections from the UV filtering epoxy weren't bad but the coloring went toward a yellowish-tint that even Photoshop couldn't eliminate without interfering with the colors of the letters.)The content of the essay was also considered but the scenes described were brutal. The narrative was filled with discrimination and violence, but it also mentions how Chief Hatcher was instrumental in getting the State of South Carolina to officially recognize the Waccamaw tribe, the first tribe to be so honored. I was impressed by the effort to turn bad experiences into a positive legacy for the future. To that end, I sought out an official document, something filled with respect and honor. I found the concurrent House of Representatives and Senate resolution from May 5, 2005. There's a possibility that ... once upon a time ... I even framed it! Mouse House did an awful lot of framing for resolutions from the late 1990s until we retired.
CONGRATULATING THE WACCAMAW INDIAN PEOPLE ON RECEIVING THE HIGH HONOR OF BEING RECOGNIZED AS A “TRIBE” BY THE SOUTH CAROLINA COMMISSION FOR MINORITY AFFAIRS.
Whereas, the ancestors of today’s Native American Indians inhabited the land of the present day South Carolina; and
Whereas, Native American Indians have traditionally exhibited respect for our finite natural resources through a deep reverence for the Earth; and
Whereas, many ancestors suffered and perished in the lands to which their descendents now maintain a powerful spiritual connection, as is evidenced by their customs and legends; and
Whereas, Indian people are resilient and determined to preserve, develop, and transmit to future generations their unique cultural identities; and
Whereas, Native American Indians have served with valor in all of the Nation’s wars from the Revolutionary War through Operation Iraqi Freedom; and
Whereas, Native American Indians have made distinct and important contributions to the United States, South Carolina, and the rest of the world in many fields, including agriculture, medicine, music, language, and art, and they have distinguished themselves as inventors, entrepreneurs, spiritual leaders, and scholars; and
Whereas, such statewide recognition of the contributions of Native American Indians to the United States and South Carolina will encourage self-esteem, pride, self-awareness and respect in Native American Indians; and
Whereas, such statewide recognition will allow all South Carolinians of all backgrounds to demonstrate their respect of and admiration for Native American Indians for the richness of their contribution to the political, cultural, and economic life of the State of South Carolina; and
Whereas, the National Museum of the American Indian was established within the Smithsonian Institution as a living memorial to the Native Peoples and their traditions.
Now, therefore, be it resolved by the House of Representatives and Senate





















