
Akwesasne artist wins juried art show with salute to ironworkers
Karhatiron Perkins won Best in Show for his Lunch on a Highbeam sculpture, which is his take on a famous 1932 photo of 11 ironworkers having lunch on a beam 260 metres off the ground in New York City.
"Growing up, I always thought those were all Mohawk men," said Perkins, about the famous photo.
In Perkins's bronze and metal cast piece there are nine ironworkers sitting on a beam in ribbon shirts representing the nine Haudenosaunee clans: turtle, wolf, bear, snipe, beaver, deer, hawk and heron. Instead of lunch boxes, they have bowls meant to represent a Kanienʼkehá:ka staple, corn soup.
Perkins comes from a family of ironworkers; his father and grandfather were in the trade.
"I wanted to do a piece just like highlighting the Native men who were ironworkers," said Perkins.
In the late 1950s, Kanienʼkehá:ka ironworkers made up about 15 per cent of New York's ironworkers and had a hand in the construction of many iconic buildings like the Rockefeller Center, Empire State building and Chrysler building.
There are believed to be three ironworkers from Kahnawà:ke, a Kanienʼkehá:ka community near Montreal, in Lunch atop a Skyscraper, according to community members. The men are thought to be Peter Skaronhiati Stacey, Joseph Jocks and Peter Sakaronhiotane Rice.
All artists from Akwesasne
The Akwesasne art market and juried art show, which took place July 25-26 in the community straddling the Ontario, Quebec and New York state borders, was hosted by Akwesasne Travel and gives out a grand prize of $2,500 US (about $3,400 Cdn.)
This year there were 44 artists who displayed work in the show, said Randi Barreiro, a marketing specialist for the Saint Regis Mohawk Tribe Office of Economic Development and works with Akwesasne Travel.
"This year's Best in Show was just a phenomenal piece," said Barreiro.
"I'm a daughter and a granddaughter of ironworkers so I immediately could recognize his inspiration."
All of the participants in the show were from Akwesasne.
"It's really a spotlight of the talent that we have here in the community," said Barreiro.
Cultural elements
Perkins is a recent graduate of the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, N.M. and made the sculpture for a class. This was the first time he had submitted to an art competition.
"It felt unreal; I didn't really believe it," said Perkins about winning the show.
Perkins is a multi-disciplinary artist in drawing, painting, ceramics, and making digital art. Right now he is busy selling his work at markets.
"Most of my art that I make has to do with cultural elements," said Perkins.
"[I] mainly create to empower people to practise their culture and be interested in it."
Perkins said he would love to see the sculpture one day in a museum or on display at a community building.
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Toronto Sun
18 hours ago
- Toronto Sun
British golfer Charley Hull gives glimpse at freak injury aftermath
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Globe and Mail
18 hours ago
- Globe and Mail
Dulcimer player Rick Scott helped establish B.C.'s folk scene
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There was even a hippie-dippie attempt to 'levitate' the Pentagon building. 'It was this great moment,' Mr. Scott told The Globe and Mail in 2001. 'It was total foolishness. People were just sitting out on the grass, blowing giant bubbles and playing drums and flutes. Inside the Pentagon, there was this war situation. They didn't know what to do because it weren't in the manual. They finally decided that if the building did start to lift off, they would shoot 'em. They couldn't quite grasp the concept. To me, that's pure anarchy.' Disenchanted with the political conditions in the United States, Mr. Scott moved to Canada in 1970. In 1971, he hitchhiked up B.C.'s Sunshine Coast with Mr. Stone, his first wife, Sue (P'chi) Scott, and his dog, Mousse. 'It was tough for three hippies with a dog to catch a ride, but after about half an hour a woman driving a beat up Ford Pinto pulled over,' Mr. Scott later wrote of the experience. 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That same year, Pied Pumkin played a 10-week, 25th anniversary tour. In 2000, they released the live album Pied Alive. Ms. Ulrich recalled running a song idea past Mr. Scott. It was called Making Friends With Gone, inspired by the deaths of people close to her. Though Mr. Scott was typically supportive and encouraging when it came to other musicians, he was not in favour of Making Friends With Gone. 'He had just lost someone in his life who he cherished,' Ms. Ulrich said. 'He told me he didn't like the song, and that he didn't believe you could make friends with gone. That keeps popping in my mind, of course, because that's what I have to do now.' Mr. Scott leaves his stepmother, Hilda Scott; sisters, Sandra Woodall and Tara Scott; children, Jorg Scott and Tai Scott; stepchildren from his first marriage, Jason Metz and Sebastian Metz; longtime partner and manager, Valley Hennell; and stepson, Whelm King. You can find more obituaries from The Globe and Mail here. To submit a memory about someone we have recently profiled on the Obituaries page, e-mail us at obit@

CTV News
a day ago
- CTV News
Taylor Swift's new album comes on cassette. Who is buying those?
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