Watchtower

Jeffrey Gibson, Watchtower, 2018, polyester satin, printed chiffon, polyester organza, canvas, tin jingles, nylon fringe, assorted glass, plastic, and stone beads, acrylic mirrors, sheet acrylic, nylon thread, artificial sinew, tipi poles, 251 × 75 × 13 in. (637.5 × 190.5 × 33.0 cm), Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase through the Luisita L. and Franz H. Denghausen Endowment, 2020.5.1, © 2019, Jeffrey Gibson

Artwork Details

Title
Watchtower
Date
2018
Location
Not on view
Dimensions
251 × 75 × 13 in. (637.5 × 190.5 × 33.0 cm)
Copyright
© 2019, Jeffrey Gibson
Credit Line
Museum purchase through the Luisita L. and Franz H. Denghausen Endowment
Mediums Description
polyester satin, printed chiffon, polyester organza, canvas, tin jingles, nylon fringe, assorted glass, plastic, and stone beads, acrylic mirrors, sheet acrylic, nylon thread, artificial sinew, tipi poles
Classifications
Subjects
  • Dress — ceremonial
Object Number
2020.5.1

Artwork Description

With colorful, oversized tunics Jeffrey Gibson asks, "Can a garment be a statement? Can a garment be a sculpture? Can a garment be political?"

The works are adorned with sequins, jingles, protest images, and song lyrics, as well as intricate beadwork characteristic of Choctaw tribal traditions and a rainbow color scheme common to contemporary powwow regalia.  For Gibson, each element represents a building block of identity--a public marker of how others see us and how we come to know ourselves.

Gibson is a citizen of the Mississippi band of Choctaw Indians and of Cherokee descent.  But apart from attending community gatherings and powwows, he wasn't raised within a Native community.  As such, he would ask himself, "'Am I a participant?' 'Am I an observer?' 'Where do I stand in there?'"  He describes feeling like an outsider, as he and his family traveled around the world with his civil engineer father, moving from Colorado to Germany to New Jersey, Korea, and Maryland.  He has said that "this kind of movement through different forms of identity has made me grow and see the world in a very broad way."

Gibson's garments were inspired by the shirts worn by Lakota people as part of the Ghost Dance spiritual movement in the nineteenth century.  For those who practiced it, the dance was intended to summon ancestral spirits, return to traditional ways of life, and repel colonizers from Native land.  Gibson was drawn to the notion of garments that could transform and bestow power on the wearer.  As a young gay man, this image helped him connect to communities and ideas greater than himself, and to construct a larger-than-life vision of identity based on the histories and experiences that shaped him.

Works by this artist (19 items)

Mary Nimmo Moran, The Old Homestead, 1880, etching and chine colle on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the National Museum of American History, Division of Graphic Arts, Smithsonian Institution, 1973.122.59
The Old Homestead
Date1880
etching and chine colle on paper
Not on view
Mary Nimmo Moran, Twilight, ca. 1880-1890, etching, roulette, sandpaper, and scotchstone on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the National Museum of American History, Division of Graphic Arts, Smithsonian Institution, 1973.122.54
Twilight
Dateca. 1880-1890
etching, roulette, sandpaper, and scotchstone on paper
Not on view
Mary Nimmo Moran, (Three Maidens at the River), ca.1880-1890, etching on paper, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Transfer from the National Museum of American History, Division of Graphic Arts, Smithsonian Institution, 1973.122.57
(Three Maidens at the River)
Dateca.1880-1890
etching on paper
Not on view

More Artworks from the Collection

Edward Sachse, Smithsonian Institute, ca. 1855, hand-colored lithograph, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Al Marzorini in honor of Harry Lowe, 2019.23
Smithsonian Institute
Dateca. 1855
hand-colored lithograph
Not on view
Marching As to War
Daten.d.
color etching
Not on view
Pharoh’s Horses
Artist
Unidentified (British)
Daten.d.
engraving
Not on view
Jakob Steinhardt, Untitled, n.d., etching, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of Adelyn D. Breeskin, 1970.61
Untitled
Daten.d.
etching
Not on view