
UNLV Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art
Las Vegas, Nevada
We believe everyone deserves access to art that challenges our understanding of the present and inspires us to create a future that makes space for us all.
Message- Noelle Garcia
- Cigarettes, 2015
- Glass beads and thread
- 2.857 x 0.25 x 0.125 in
- Inv: 2017.22.003
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Available
Noelle Garcia
Cigarettes, 2015
Glass beads and thread
Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art Collection
Gift of the Artist
2017.22.003
Noelle Garcia uses a range of media to shape a personal response to the complexities of family relationships and indigenous identity. Her reimagined cigarettes bring Native American traditions of beadwork to bear on symbols of pervasive, commonplace cultural change. An enrolled member of the Klamath tribes, she has been a fellow of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian and the Nevada Arts Council. (DKS)
"I had several different motivations behind making this work. I wanted to make something that reminded me of my dad, but I also wanted to play with the peyote round stitch technique that is used by contemporary Indigenous people for making jewelry. My dad passed away somewhat young due to cancer from his extensive cigarette smoking, so my feelings about cigarettes are balanced with concern and affection. In addition, cigarettes have a layered relationship with Native American peoples. Many tribes use tobacco as an offering or during many other religious ceremonies. In modern history, the image of the Marlboro Man smoking cigarettes in his cowboy hat with his horse while free in the wilderness was a seductive image for many Native American men. After being culturally reprogrammed by Indian boarding schools, the image of a man in the wilderness was reminiscent of something many Indigenous people lost — a relationship with nature."
Item Description:
A glass bead and string sculpture depicting 12 cigarettes that utilizes stitching techniques used by contemporary Indigenous people for making jewelry. Created as a representative of the many layered relationships between the artist, her father, and Native Americans in relation to tobacco use in religious ceremonies, as well as modern pop culture and the affects of cancer through an attempt to rekindle a relationship with nature.
- Collections: Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art Collection