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Maria Hupfield

Performance Documents

Four performers wear Indigenous ceremonial or black clothing. One wears a gray felt shawl with silver jingles. One holds a landscape painting.

See video documentation of performances by Maria Hupfield that invite you to think about what objects mean and encourage you to actively engage with your surroundings, ideas, and experiences.

Maria Hupfield’s practice is collaborative. In her high-spirited performances she works with artists, writers, and musicians to create some works, while objects, histories, and stories are her partners for others. Her exhibition at the Wex, Maria Hupfield: The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan), includes a presentation in The Box of three videos documenting her performances. 
 
Experience an improvised score titled 4 Bodies 1 Screen (2020; 76:38 mins., video), a performance made on the Zoom platform during the COVID-19 pandemic. Here, with her collaborators T.J. Dedeaux-Norris, Ayana Evans, and Esther Neff, Hupfield explores our bodies’ relationship to the many screens in our lives and enacts community building despite their physical separation.
 
In The Silver-Tongued Taste of Progress (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2018; 5:59 mins., video), Hupfield works with sound tools—handmade objects that are worn, carried, and activated through performance. Silver tongue is a slang term for settlers who negotiated treaties with Indigenous peoples only to break them as they sought and enacted their inequitable idea of progress.
 
In the third video documentation, The One Who Keeps on Giving (2018; 16:16 mins., video), Hupfield develops a performance with her siblings inspired by their mother’s 1974 painting of the shores of Parry Sound in eastern Ontario. The title is an English translation of their mother’s Anishinaabe name.

IMAGE CAPTION
Maria Hupfield, The One Who Keeps on Giving, 2017 (still). Two-channel video. Performance with Hupfield family members Deanne, Johna, John, and Maria. Courtesy of the artist. 

"I learn so much about people in performance art whether it is me, the other artists, the host venue, or the audience."
Maria Hupfield

More about the artist

Maria Hupfield chevron-down chevron-up

Maria Hupfield merges performance art, design, and sculpture, drawing from Indigenous storytelling traditions through art, scholarship, collaboration, and social justice.
 
Hupfield was the inaugural ArtworxTO Legacy Artist in Residence with the City of Toronto and a recipient of the Hnatyshyn Mid-Career Award for Outstanding Achievement and the Toronto Friends of the Visual Arts Artist Prize, among others. Her work has been exhibited, performed, and collected across North America. She is co-owner of Native Art Department International with her husband, artist Jason Lujan.
 
Hupfield is Martin clan and an off-reservation member of the Anishinaabe Nation belonging to Wasauksing First Nation, Ontario. Since 2019, she is a Canada research chair in transdisciplinary Indigenous art and an assistant professor of Indigenous digital arts and performance in the Department of Visual Studies and the Department of English & Drama at the University of Toronto Mississauga.

THIS PRESENTATION IS MADE POSSIBLE BY
Ohio State Energy Partners

EXHIBITIONS 2024–25 SEASON MADE POSSIBLE BY  
Bill and Sheila Lambert  
Crane Family Foundation  

FREE GALLERIES MADE POSSIBLE BY  
Adam Flatto
PNC Foundation

WEXNER CENTER PROGRAMS MADE POSSIBLE BY  
Greater Columbus Arts Council

The Wexner Family 
Institute of Museum and Library Services

Mellon Foundation
Every Page Foundation
Ohio Arts Council
, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts 
CampusParc

Nationwide Foundation

Lois S. and H. Roy Chope Fund of The Columbus Foundation
The Columbus Foundation 
Axium Packaging

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT PROVIDED BY
Ohio History Fund/Ohio History Connection  
David Crane and Elizabeth Dang


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Maria Hupfield