Exhibited Indians: Eye and Irony in the Art of David Bradley

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A. Robert Lee

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Published: 1 October 2018 | Article Type :

Abstract

Like all strong visual artists the Native American painter David Bradley has been nothing if not his own stylist, his work a genuine force of invention. Whether rich muralist-narrative pieces given over satirizing the ideology of Manifest Destiny or the commercialization of the “Indian” in film and media, there can be no missing the assured irony, the tease both serious and less than serious. That derives from Bradley’s fierce commitment to issues of Native redress across a span of politics, art, sovereignty, and image. It also reflects his White Earth Earth/Chippewa origins in Minnesota and Peace Core years in indigenous Guatemala, not to mention his take on what it means to live as a contemporary Native American. The essay explores vivid muralist pieces like “Pow-Wow Princess in the Process of Acculturation,”“Pictures at an Exhibition, “How the West Was Lost,” or “Route 66 Postcard.” This Insistence upon Bradley’s unique styling is also to recognize inter-creative visual traces -- be it Diego Rivera or Fritz Scholder, Fernando Botero or Andy Warhol. The essay argues for Bradley’s rare command, the wit of his eye and vision.

Keywords: Native American, Irony, Image, Humor, Collage, Style, Visual

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A. Robert Lee. (2018-10-01). "Exhibited Indians: Eye and Irony in the Art of David Bradley." *Volume 1*, 4, 1-12