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Interpreting the Ancient and
the Modern MNA's Kiva Gallery Interactive Experience
Ki''va
-- noun, a Hopi name that means sacred chamber. A new media-based interactive experience has been
unveiled in MNA’s Kiva Gallery. Exhibit elements have been designed to
accompany the modern Hopi kiva mural by artists Michael Kabotie and
Delbridge Honanie that recreates ancient stories of
emergence and traditional Hopi life. Most exciting among the new exhibit
elements is the digital touch-screen interpretation that allows the
visitor to experience a virtual tour of MNA’s modern kiva mural. Through the touch-screen, first-person accounts by
the artists come alive and visitors can view a visual chronology of the
making of the modern kiva mural. A display of the mural floats on the
screen while various mural topics at hotspots prompt an interaction. When
one of the mural topics—the emergence, the ancient church at Awatovi,
finding the middle place, the rational side, or hope—is activated, it
enlarges on the touch-screen, providing audio voice-over and scrolling
text descriptions. Through the technology of digital video it is
possible to simultaneously view a selection of video clips. Visitors enjoy
a film on the historical and archaeological significance of kivas on the
Colorado Plateau. They can also view a film highlighting the mural artists
Kabotie (Lomawywesa, village of Shungopavy) and Honanie (Coochsiwukioma,
village of Shungopavy). Internationally recognized masters of this ancient
tradition, they discuss aspects of the “mythic journey mural”—their
individual and cultural exploration of Pueblo artistic history.
Large-format graphics display ogre characters, the ancient Awatovi kiva
murals, katsina dolls, an old-style kiva, and Hopi ceremonies and life as
it was in the early part of this century. The new exhibit elements are designed to further
interpret the splendid mural tradition of Pueblo culture of the American
Southwest. Frequently painted with elaborate scenes of ceremonial and
legendary images, the ancient and sophisticated kiva images of the
fourteenth through seventeenth centuries have profoundly influenced Hopi
and Rio Grande Pueblo artists of today. The interpretation in the Kiva Gallery represents the
first stages of exhibition work in a new partnership between MNA and
Yavapai College’s Sedona Center for Arts and Technology. MNA’s
Paul M. Legris is working directly with Yavapai College’s General
Manager, Jodie S. Filardo and Director of Digital Media Arts
Program, Eduard Uzemickis. “The Kiva Gallery represents MNA’s greatest shrine to the Hopi people and the traditional cultures of the Colorado Plateau. It will serve as a model and launching point for further media-based interpretation for upcoming exhibitions, including MNA’s traveling exhibit Magic of the Painted Room: Indian Murals of the American Southwest,” states Legris. MNA’s Board of Trustees is confident that its new parnership with Yavapai College will foster greater outreach to potential audiences and members as MNA tackles its mission of bringing the Colorado Plateau to the world.
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