Legal Briefs - June 2021

NAGPRA Repatriations through September 8, 2020;
Law’s Opaque Reporting Leads to Masking Objects’ Identities

by Ron McCoy

Interior of Chief Shakes House, via Wikimedia Commons

Interior of Chief Shakes House, via Wikimedia Commons

 In 1990, Americans debated how best to observe (or ignore) the upcoming Columbian quincentenary. Pressed hard, Congress sought some way to signal a desire to make some amends for past practices and ongoing injustices meted out to the nation’s indigenous peoples.Its response took the form of the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), which lays out a blueprint for attempting to not only revisit but essentially redo the past.

The law seeks to accomplish this by establishing a process for repatriating certain types of “cultural items”[1] of Native American or Native Hawaiian origin from institutions that meet its broad definition of “museum.”[2]The rationale underlying this practice rests on the proposition that the very nature of certain objects renders them inherently involved in, forever connected to, and fundamentally inalienable from the tribal milieu. If the museum and claimant(s) — specific tribal entities or identified individuals — agree on the legitimacy of the claim, the piece will be repatriated.

In order to qualify as a cultural item under NAGPRA, a piece must fulfill the requirements for inclusion in one or more of its five categories: human remains, associated funerary objects, unassociated funerary objects, sacred objects, and objects of cultural patrimony. Given this column’s anticipated readership — people who curate, collect, and deal in authentic tribal art — pieces that find their way into a pair of NAGPRA categories regularly receive attention: sacred objects[3] and objects of cultural patrimony.[4]

NAGPRA news appearing here is typically related to repatriations of materials the museums possessing them and those laying claim to them have agreed should be transferred back into the tribal sphere from which they came. That information is drawn largely from the Federal Register, sometimes augmented by additional sources. The Federal Register may not find a place on most of our reading lists, but it remains the forum of record for publishing announcements about the repatriation agreements museums and claimants arrive at through NAGPRA.

NAGPRA repatriation notices published in the Federal Register follow a standard template. That blueprint is designed to: inform readers about the identities of the institution and claimant(s) involved in the repatriation bid; provide information about a piece, its description, function, and provenance that support the case for its inherent inalienability from — and therefore the need for its repatriation to — the tribal world; and, finally, identify the person(s) or entity to which the object will be repatriated pending the filing of a competing claim. (There is no requirement under NAGPRA for any of the parties involved in the process to account for an object’s actual final disposition. A dozen tribal entities are listed in the first notice summarized below, for example, but how such a repatriation would be carried out is not this law’s concern.)

Ideally, one should be able to read a NAGPRA repatriation notice in the Federal Register and learn quite a bit about a given piece’s appearance, provenance, and role.

Each element in a NAGPRA notice is important, but a point of particular concern and interest is that part in which the object to be repatriated is described. That is because for this column’s intended audience, knowledge about a piece’s construction, appearance, and provenance is of vital importance if they are to understand how the letter and spirit of the law are reflected through its application.

This current harvest of NAGPRA notices of intent to repatriate sacred objects and objects of cultural patrimony brings us up to date on those appearing in the Federal Register through September 8, 2020. (Unless otherwise indicated, quotations used in reporting notices comes from those notices.)

 

Diegueño/Kumeyaay Basketry Feathered Shaman’s Hat
Sacred Object

Museum of Riverside, Riverside, CA (Sept. 8, 2020): The item covered by this repatriation notice, otherwise undescribed, is a “basketry feathered shaman’s hat” dated to circa 1900, a “sacred item [which] was removed from the traditional land of the Diegueño/Kumeyaay in San Diego County, CA.”No additional information supports that conclusion, and the piece’s provenance evidently consists of a 1952 letter documenting its donation to the institution.

The museum agreed to transfer the hat to a group of culturally related California entities referred to collectively as “The Tribes” for purposes of the notice: the Campo Band of Diegueno Mission Indians of the Campo Indian Reservation; Capitan Grande Band of Diegueno Mission Indians (Barona Group of Capitan Grande Band of Mission Indians of the Barona Reservation); Viejas (Baron Long) Group of Capitan Grande Band of Mission Indians of the Viejas Reservation); Ewiiaapaayp Band of Kumeyaay Indians; Iipay Nation of Santa Ysabel; Inaja Band of Diegueno Mission Indians of the Inaja and Cosmit Reservation; Jamul Indian Village; La Posta Band of Diegueno Mission Indians of the La Posta Indian Reservation; Manzanita Band of Diegueno Mission Indians of the Manzanita Reservation; Mesa Grande Band of Diegueno Mission Indians of the Mesa Grande Reservation; San Pasqual Band of Diegueno Mission Indians; and the Sycuan Band of the Kumeyaay Nation.

 

Painted Drum (Cochiti Pueblo)
Sacred Object/ Cultural Patrimony

Harry Ransom Center, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX (July 30, 2020): This notice focuses on a painted wooden drum acquired by California attorney Erle Stanley Gardner (1889-1970), who achieved fame as the prolific creator-chronicler of fictional courtroom lion Perry Mason. We know nothing about this drum, other than that fact of its donation to the museum as part of Gardner’s estate and the piece’s general appearance: “a wooden drum with rawhide ends and lacing, and painted in ochre, dark brown, and white colors.”

According to the notice, “research and consultation with representatives from the Pueblo of Cochiti, New Mexico, found that Cochiti is known by all Pueblos for creating ceremonial drums of this style for tribal use in the practice of traditional native religion.” (Cochiti is also known for producing drums for the marketplace.) “Accordingly, this drum…clearly is a sacred object originating from Cochiti Pueblo,” to which the museum agreed the drum should be repatriated.

By combining this notice with an interesting firsthand account of the process written by Ester Harrison, a member of the museum’s staff, it is possible to glean some insight into how this decision was made.[5]

Basically, after the museum figured out the drum was likely of Native American origin, probably from the Southwest, the instrument was included in a 2019 summary of possible NAGPRA-affected objects in its collections. About a year later, Harrison writes, “we were delighted to hear from the Cochiti Pueblo in New Mexico who positively identified one of the drums in the inventory as being Cochiti and an object of cultural patrimony.”[6] After that, “[w]orking closely with the Cochiti Pueblo contact primarily by telephone, we supported each other through the required next steps, sometimes sharing each other’s views and experiences and embarking on a meaningful new professional relationship in the process.”[7]

 

Killer Whale Shirt (Tlingit)
Sacred Object/ Cultural Patrimony

Minnesota Museum of American Art, St. Paul, MN (June 10, 2020): In 1926, Presbyterian minister and teacher Axel Rasmussen (1886-1945) commenced a decade-long tenure as superintendent of schools in Wrangell, Alaska, subsequently taking up a similar posting in Skagway.[8] Over the years, Rasmussen, a keen student of Tlingit and other regional cultures, put together a substantial collection of pieces from the area’s indigenous peoples. Among his acquisitions is the piece to which this notice refers: a killer whale shirt, which the Minnesota Museum of American Art bought from the Portland Art Museum in 1957.

This shirt is associated with the Naanya.aayí clan, which serves as its collective custodian. Tribal representatives “described how the clan came to own the name and crest killer whale Sheiyksh, and demonstrated the traditional uncle-to-nephew hereditary transfer of the item going back to the first Chief Shakes.” (A photograph taken in the early 1940s shows Chief Shakes VII, also known as Charlie Jones, wearing this shirt.)[9]

The writer(s) of this notice took pains to emphasize the nature of the bonds linking the Naanya.aayí clan to this shirt. “The killer whale shirt bonds the Tlingit people to their ancestors,” the author tells us, “symbolizing the people’s relationship to the being depicted on it.” The prominent inclusion of the clan crest in the garment’s overall design “provides a physical form in which spiritual beings manifest their presence.”

The notice finds this shirt is “needed for current and ongoing cultural and religious practices,” and, further, that “under the Tlingit system of communal property ownership, it could not be alienated, appropriated, or conveyed by any individual.”

Accordingly, the museum agreed to return the killer whale shirt to the Central Council of the Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes, acting for itself and on behalf of the Wrangell Cooperative Association (specifically the Naanya.aayí clan).

 

5,816 Objects (Winnebago)
Cultural Patrimony

John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan, WI (June 10, 2020): Watchmaker and amateur archaeologist Rudolph Kuehne (1855-1929)[10] amassed a large trove of objects during some thirty-five years of digging and scraping in and around Sheboygan, Wisconsin. The collection he built contains nearly six thousand objects, including: stone points, scrapers, hand axes, hammerstones, gorgets, beads, and gaming pieces; copper points, blades, awls, amulets, beads, and rings; antler awls; also clay vessels, plant specimens, and seven beaded sashes or belts.[11]

After Kuehne’s death, the museum’s parent entity acquired this material from his widow.

The museum agreed these cultural items qualified as objects of cultural patrimony under NAGPRA and should be transferred to the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska, whose ancestors resided in the Sheboygan area.

 

Eleven Objects “Erroneously Identified…as Masks” (Navajo)
Sacred Objects

Federal Bureau of Investigation, Art Theft Program, Washington, D.C. (June 10, 2020): At a time unknown, “11 sacred objects were acquired in the Southwest and transported to the East Coast.” There, these eleven undescribed pieces became “part of a private collection of Native American antiquities, art and cultural heritage.” In the spring of 2018, the FBI, acting in connection with a criminal investigation, seized those objects, which had been “erroneously identified by the collector as masks.” (For the moment, let us leave aside the question of what these pieces might be; after all, the notice tells us their identification as masks would be erroneous since they are obviously not masks.) The FBI determined these pieces are sacred objects that rightfully belong with the Navajo Nation of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah.

If you are left a bit confused wondering what this notice is about, you are not alone.
In what appears to be a growing trend with NAGPRA notices, the author(s) of this entry opted for opacity by providing as little information as possible. Whether done intentionally or unconsciously, this renders the notice practically worthless for tribal art curators, collectors, and dealers in their attempts to discern the shifting parameters of the objects embraced by NAGPRA. The situation here is rendered patently absurd, because the eleven objects “erroneously identified by the collector as masks” are almost certainly eleven masks.

How did we arrive at the point where such a conclusion seems to be the only one that is even remotely reasonable?

We receive the message these objects are masks because the notice takes great pains to inform us they are not masks. The author(s) of the notice manage to attain this questionable goal by emphasizing that the objects were “erroneously identified by the collector as masks [italics added]. If these pieces are not masks, what are they? Baskets? Quillwork? Rattles? Pottery? It seems perfectly reasonable to conclude that what a collector “erroneously” identified as masks must have looked to her/him a lot like…masks.

“What’s in a name?” William Shakespeare’s Juliet asks her Romeo. After all, she asserts: “That which we call a rose/By any other name would smell as sweet.”[12] (It might be helpful to recall that, like the rest of Romeo and Juliet, the words the bard placed on Juliet’s lips form part of a tragedy.) Some three centuries later, modernist writer Gertrude Stein reminded readers: “a rose is a rose is a rose is a rose.”[13] But obscuring the identity of a mask by failing to even describe it properly — while simultaneously asserting someone “erroneously identified” it as a mask — constitutes an act of masking.

It seems likely this masking exercise was intended to address the sensibilities of people for whom describing certain objects as “masks” would be problematic. However worthwhile that goal may be, in this instance the act of bending to it eliminates the possibility of presenting meaningful information about the pieces. Even Shakespeare and Stein, when talking about roses, did not use esoteric code; instead, they used a specific, readily understood word — that word was “rose” — so readers would know what they were writing about. In that vein, here is a suggestion for NAGPRA notice writers: Instead of muddying the waters, why not consult a list of appropriate synonyms for “mask”? In the meantime, let me suggest one: “not-mask.”

NAGPRA, like any law, is credible only so long as it is understood. Obscuring the identity of objects slated for repatriation is a profoundly unhelpful act, one which falls well outside the goal of keeping us informed about how the law is enforced.

 

Please note: This column does not offer legal or financial advice. Anyone requiring such advice should consult a professional in the relevant field. The author welcomes readers’ comments and suggestions, which may be sent to him at legalbriefs@atada.org

ENDNOTES

[1] “Cultural items” under NAGPRA means: “Human remains, associated funerary objects, unassociated funerary objects, sacred objects, [and] cultural patrimony.” “Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act: Glossary,” National Park Service (2020), https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nagpra/glossary.htm

[2] For NAGPRA’s purposes, a “museum” refers to “[a]ny institution or State or Local government agency (including any institution of higher learning) that receives Federal funds an has possession of, or control over, Native American cultural items.” Ibid. Specifically excluded: “the Smithsonian Institution or any other Federal agency,” which are covered by other legislation.

[3]For NAGPRA’s purposes, a “sacred object” is “needed by traditional Native American religious leaders for the practice of traditional Native American religions by their present day [sic] adherents.” Ibid.

[4] An object is deemed “cultural patrimony” under NAGPRA if it has “ongoing historical, traditional, or cultural importance central to the Native American group or cultural itself, rather than property owned by an individual Native American, and which, therefore, cannot be alienated, appropriated, or conveyed by any individual regardless of whether or not the individual is a member of the Indian tribe or such Native American group at the time the object was separated from such group.” Ibid.

[5] Ester Harrison, “The Ransom Center and NAGPRA: A Team Effort in Research,” Ransom Center Magazine (2021), https://sites.utexas.edu/ransomcentermagazine/2021/02/18/the-ransom-center-and-nagpra-a-team-effort-in-research/

[6] Ibid.

[7] Ibid.

[8] Bill Mercer, “Native American Art at Portland Art Museum,” American Indian Art Magazine, Vol. 26, No. 2 (74-81), 76-79; “Beloit College Collections,” (n.d., accessed May 2, 2019). https://dcms.beloit.edu/digital/collection/logan/id/3274/

[9] The information accompanying the photograph labels the garment worn by Shakes VII the “Killer Whale Flotilla Robe.” “Chief Shakes VII,” Alaska’s Digital Archives (Alaska State Library – Historical Collections), https://vilda.alaska.edu/digital/collection/cdmg21/id/2418/

[10] “Emma Greiser Kuehne,“ Find a Grave (2021). https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/101993518/emma-kuehne

[11] At the time, The Wisconsin Archaeologist, NS, Vol. 9, No. 3 (April 1930) (The Wisconsin Archeological Society), 143, described Kuehne’s collection as “one of Wisconsin’s richest and most valuable private archeological collections.”

[12] Romeo and Juliet, Act II Scene II REDO “The Complete Works of Shakespeare,”

http://shakespeare.mit.edu/romeo_juliet/romeo_juliet.2.2.html

[13] In her 1913 poem “Sacred Emily” (1913), Stein wrote: “Rose is a rose is a rose is a rose.” Later, in Operas and Plays (1932), she recalibrated her remarks: “Do we suppose that all she knows is that a rose is a rose is a rose is a rose.” “Gertrude Stein,” EPC Digital Library (Electronic Poetry Center, 2011), http://writing.upenn.edu/library/Stein-Gertrude_Rose-is-a-rose.html

 

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Throughout our history, the mission of the ATADA Foundation has been to provide support for Native and Tribal art exhibitions, Native Artist scholarships, educational programs and humanitarian aid.

This year, we have focused our efforts on providing support for indigenous peoples affected by Covid-19. Through the generous donations of ATADA members and friends, we have raised over $20,000 to help Native American Nations bring food, water, supplies and other assistance to those in need. On this #GivingTuesday, we are asking you to help us reach our current goal of $30,000 in order to continue these efforts.

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Legal Briefs - November 2020

NAGPRA (Increasingly Opaque) Repatriations through April 20, 2020

by Ron McCoy 


Totem poles outside of Chief Shakes' home, Wrangell, Alaska, 1895

Totem poles outside of Chief Shakes' home, Wrangell, Alaska, 1895

The way things — “things” being synonymous with “pretty much everything” — have been going of late, it’s not surprising the repatriations of objects carried out under the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA), which the U.S. Congress passed back in 1990, occupy at best a backburner for most of us just now. Nevertheless, NAGPRA remains in effect and its impact continues rippling through the world of antique tribal art dealers, collectors, curators, and scholars.

By way of a quick summing-up: NAGPRA is dedicated in part to repatriating “cultural items”[1] — physical objects — of Native American and Native Hawaiian origin from any institution satisfying its broad definition of “museum.”[2] In order to be eligible for repatriation, a piece must satisfy NAGPRA’s requirements for including it in one (or more) of its five categories: human remains, associated funerary objects, unassociated funerary objects, sacred objects and objects of cultural patrimony. The two categories that regularly receive attention in this space are sacred objects[3] and objects of cultural patrimony.[4]

Announcements of a decision to repatriate objects — issued, pending the arrival on the scene of one or more competing claims on the piece — appear on an irregular basis in the Federal Register. These notices are supposed to let us know: (a) the institution involved; (b) the identity of the claimant(s); (c) information about the piece and its history; and (d) the person or body to which a piece will be repatriated. (Unless otherwise indicated, the quotes used in reporting these notices comes from the notices themselves.)

Each component of a notice of intent to repatriate — identifying the parties to the agreement; explaining what the piece is and why/how it satisfies the law’s requirements for inclusion NAGPRA’s sacred objects and/or objects of cultural patrimony categories; and, finally, the reveal: where it’s going now — is important in and of itself. That’s why, as I read through a notice, it’s the description of a piece and its history that looms especially large — particularly with respect to what types of objects, specifically, the law embraces.

After all, without that, how can we possibly know what, exactly, is being repatriated? Please keep that in mind when glancing at the final two notices in the current column.

Here, then, are summaries of NAGPRA notices of intent to repatriate sacred objects and objects of cultural patrimony that appeared in the Federal Register through April 20, 2020.

 

Tlingit Killerwhale Hat, Rich Man’s Cane (Killerwhale Cane), Marmot Mask, Bear Headress, Bear Shirt, Sea Monster Pipe, Grizzly Bear Mask
Objects of Cultural Patrimony/Sacred Objects

Thomas Burke Memorial Washington State Museum, University of Washington, Seattle, WA (April 20, 2020): This notice highlights seven pieces of Tlingit origin.

Five of the seven objects were purchased by the museum in 1953 from the widow of Walter C. Walters, who operated the Bear Totem Store curio emporium at Wrangell, in southeastern Alaska.[5] Walters opened his enterprise in 1922, after acquiring works of Northwest Coast indigenous art while working as a mail carrier and fur buyer in the region.[6] The notice states Walters “removed” these pieces from Wrangell between 1920 and 1953, although the details of these transactions and exchanges appear unknown. The five objects addressed by this part of the notice are: a Killerwhale Hat, Rich Man’s (or Killerwhale) Cane, Marmot Mask, Bear Headdress, and Bear Shirt.

The notice also covers a Sea Monster Pipe, which was removed from Wrangell at a time and under circumstances unknown before ending up with art dealer Leonard S. Lasser, who donated it to the museum in 1972.

The fifth, final item repatriated under this notice is a Grizzly Bear Mask acquired between 1926-1937 by Axel Rasmussen, the superintendent of Bureau of Indian Affairs schools in Wrangell from the late 1920s until 1937, when he took up a similar position at Skagway.[7] Part of the Rasmussen collection acquired by the Portland Art Museum in 1948, the Grizzly Bear Mask was subsequently deaccessioned and acquired by noted Northwest Coast specialist Bill Holm, who donated it to the Burke Museum in 1974.

The notice references photographs showing some of the pieces listed here in situ, as it were: one of Chief Shakes, the fifth of that name, lying in state in 1878, with some of the objects surrounding him;[8] another of the interior of the clan home of his successor, Shakes VI, where some of the material was kept.[9]

Each of these items was originally collected at a time when Tlingit people were undergoing crushing hardships associated with the sort of dispossession and exploitation commonly associated with the saga of indigenous contact with the commercial, political, and spiritual representatives of European and Euroamerican cultures.[10]

All of these pieces were deemed objects of cultural patrimony and sacred objects under NAGPRA for purposes of turning them over to the Wrangell Cooperative Association and the Central Council of the Tlingit & Haida Indian Tribes in Alaska.

 

Hawaiian Zoomorphic Bowl, Basalt Cup
Sacred Objects

State of Hawaii, Department of Transportation, Honolulu, HI (Mar. 3, 2020): Between 1989-1992, highway construction in northeastern Molokai’s Halawa Valley led to the retrieval of archaeological finds, chiefly unassociated funerary objects. Among them: a zoomorphic bowl and basalt cup — listed in the notice but otherwise undescribed — which appear to have been the subject of some sort of unassociated funerary objects mix-up this notice evidently seeks to rectify. Both pieces were categorized as sacred objects and slated for transfer to lineal descendants of the person for whom the burial was created.

 

Wooden Carving of Laka, Founder of Hula
Sacred Object

Thomas Burke Memorial Washington State Museum, University of Washington, Seattle, WA (Jan. 3, 2020): In 1997, Hawaiian traditionalist artist Rocky Ka’iouliokahihikolo’Ehu Jensen “brought” the carved wooden piece covered by this notice to the museum.[11] The carving represents Laka, a female figure from the time of legends, credited as the patron of and likely originator of Hula on the island of Molokai.

The widely-held popular image of hula most likely involves an amalgam of snippets of ambient surf-sound, Don Ho warbling “Tiny Bubbles,” and scenes of happy-happy dancers waving their arms and wiggling their hips at beachside resorts’ jam-packed luaus. Whatever the entertainment value of those amusements, the motions and chants of hula, as practiced by the more traditionally minded, constitute what is nothing less than “a religious service, in which poetry, music, pantomime, and the dance lent themselves, under the forms of dramatic art, to the refreshment of men’s [sic] minds.” The “view of life” presented in hula performance, was “idyllic, and it gave itself to the celebration of those mythical times when gods and goddesses moved on the earth as men and women and when men and women were as gods.”[12]

The writer of those lines was Nathaniel B. Emerson (1839-1915), a physician, student of Hawaiian culture, and son of early Protestant missionaries to the islands. Christian missionaries like Emerson’s parents started descending in numbers during the 1820s on the Sandwich Islands, a common moniker for Hawaii until local naming practices acquired greater traction.

These missionaries generally perceived indigenous religious practices and observances as quite literally beyond the pale. Consequently, they expended considerable energy and effort addressing the competing Polynesian ethos with hostility. An example of this is seen in their lobbying among converts within the ruling elite for hula’s suppression, a goal first achieved in 1830.[13] (Among those advocating a hula ban was Emerson’s missionary father.)[14] Not surprisingly, hula — much like the Northwest Coast potlatch, Plains Sundance, and countless other ritualized expressions of cultures under assault — became a symbol of group resistance, survival, and a sort of cultural renaissance within population whose members felt very much under attack.

After consultations with representatives of the Native Hawaiian organization Nä Lei O Manu’akepa, the museum concluded the piece “is a necessary component which holds a very important role in the sacred Kuahu Ceremony of traditional Hula practitioners.” Basically, it is seen as nothing less than “a manifestation of the Hula patron, Laka, to which traditional Hula practitioners conduct ceremonies and rituals with offerings for inspiration, guidance and protection in their present-day cultural work and practices.”

The museum agreed the piece depicting Laka is a sacred object which should be dispatched to the Nä Lei O Manu’akepa.

 

Thirty-One Unidentified Pieces (Masks) Identified as Hopi Sacred Objects

U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Art Theft Program, Washington, D.C. (Jan. 3, 2020): The notice tells us that at a time unknown thirty-one “sacred objects were acquired and transported to the East Coast, where they remained part of a private collection of Native American antiquities, art, and cultural heritage.” Then, sometime in the spring of 2018, the FBI came calling and seized the pieces in connection with an unspecified criminal investigation. After “multiple consultations” with archaeologists and Hopi representatives, it was determined the pieces should be transferred to the Hopi Tribe of Arizona. As to the type of objects not otherwise described, they are “ceremonial objects that had been misidentified by the collector as ‘masks.’”

             

Unidentified Object (Mask) Identified as Zuni Sacred Object

U.S. Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Art Theft Program, Washington, D.C. (Jan. 3, 2020): The notice informs us that at an unspecified time an undescribed object, obtained by an unidentified party or parties, was “transported to the East Coast, where it remained part of a private collection of Native American antiquities, art, and cultural heritage.” We are told that in the spring of 2018 this piece “was seized by the FBI [Federal Bureau of Investigation] as part of a criminal investigation.”

The notice breaks out momentarily from its cocoon of coyness to let us know that what we are actually discussing here “is a ceremonial object that had been misidentified by the collector as a ‘mask’” which, pending competing claims, would be given over to the Pueblo of Zuni in New Mexico.

So, when it comes down to the heart of the matter, we (probably) do know what the items in the last two notice summaries are after all: masks. What kind? What age? What materials? What anything?

We do not know.

A law’s utility is inherently linked not only to the circumstances and manner of its crafting, but also in the degree to which it remains transparent and credible, the extent to its purpose for existing and how it’s applied. In this, NAGPRA has been stumbling. How can we know what is considered a sacred object or object of cultural patrimony under NAGPRA — and therefore something eligible for repatriation — unless we are told what the object is, in more detail than its inclusion within a very general category of materials?

Having followed the appearance of NAGPRA’s intent to repatriate notices for more years than I care to count, it seems the law as expressed in them is becoming increasingly opaque; in some instances, hopelessly and unhelpfully useless. There are many exceptions, but the rot of opacity and the confusion it generates and in which it thrives may have settled in for the long haul.

Please note: This column does not offer legal or financial advice. Anyone requiring such advice should consult a professional in the relevant field. The author welcomes readers’ comments and suggestions, which may be sent to him at legalbriefs@atada.org

ENDNOTES

[1] Under NAGPRA, “cultural Items” means: “Human remains, associated funerary objects, unassociated funerary objects, sacred objects, [and] cultural patrimony.” “Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act: Glossary,” National Park Service (2020), https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nagpra/glossary.htm

[2] With NAGPRA, a museum is “[a]ny institution or State or Local government agency (including any institution of higher learning) that receives Federal funds an has possession of, or control over, Native American cultural items.” Ibid. That definition specifically excludes “the Smithsonian Institution or any other Federal agency.”

[3]For NAGPRA’s purposes, a “sacred object” is a piece “needed by traditional Native American religious leaders for the practice of traditional Native American religions by their present day [sic] adherents.” Ibid. Ibid.

[4] An object is deemed to be “cultural patrimony under NAGPRA if it has “ongoing historical, traditional, or cultural importance central to the Native American group or cultural itself, rather than property owned by an individual Native American, and which, therefore, cannot be alienated, appropriated, or conveyed by any individual regardless of whether or not the individual is a member of the Indian tribe or such Native American group at the time the object was separated from such group.” Ibid.

[5] The Bear Totem Store presented a colorful, exotic aspect for visitors, as photographs taken from around 1927 (https://vilda.alaska.edu/digital/collection/cdmg21/id/23028/) and 1939 (https://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/digital/collection/ alaskawcanada/id/3243/) indicate.

[6] Bonnie Demerjian, Images of America: Wrangell (Charleston, SC: Arcadia, 2011), 30; Greg Knight, “Wrangell’s Tlingit Art on Display at Two Museums,” Wrangell Sentinel (Sep. 20, 2012), https://www.wrangellsentinel.com/story/2012/09/20/news/wrangells-tlingit-art-on-display-at-two-museums/525.html

[7] “Dagger,” Beloit College Digital Collections (n.d.), https://dcms.beloit.edu/digital/collection/logan/id/3274/

[8] For the photo of Shakes V lying in state with those objects see https://www.bgc.bard.edu/objects-exchange-chief-shakes

[9] An image showing Shakes VI “at home with possessions” in 1907 is at https://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/digital/collection/loc/id/2034. See also the photo of the object-rich interior of the Shakes VI home in 1909 at Aaron Glass, “Bard Graduate Gallery: 37. Interior of the Chief Shake House, Wrangell, Alaska, https://www.bgc.bard.edu/objects-gallery-chief-shakes-house

[10] Chip Colwell, Plundered Skulls and Stolen Spirits: Inside the Fight to Reclaim Native America’s Culture (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2017), 151-152, does a good job establishing the atmosphere in which cultural material heritage moved out of the Tlingit sphere. As if to emphasize the poverty and desperation of the Tlingit at this time, Shakes VI maintained his home as a virtual gallery, charging admission and offering pieces for sale. Glass.

[11] For Rocky Jensen, see Senator Daniel Akaka’s remarks at “Tribute to Native Hawaiian Master Artist Rocky Ka’ioliokahihikolo’Ehu Jensen,” in Congressional Record (Vol. 146, Pt. 4 [2000]), https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/CRECB-2000-pt4/html/CRECB-2000-pt4-Pg5013-2.htm;

Lucia Tarallo Jensen, “Carving Pathways to the Future: The Rocky Jensen Family Bonds in a Love of Art and Their Hawaiian Legacy,” Ke Ola – The Life: Hawaìi Island’s Community Magazine (June-July 2009), https://keolamagazine.com/art/carving-pathways-future/; Jolene Oshiro, “Activist’s Art Spiritually Authentic,” (Honolulu) Starbulletin,com (Sep. 17, 2004), http://archives.starbulletin.com/2004/09/17/features/index6.html

Of interest, also, is Wanda Ke’ala ‘Anae-Onishi, “Re-Presenting ‘The Kona Style’: Examining the Multiple Identities of Kū,” M.A. thesis (Art), University of Hawaii (2004), https://scholarspace.manoa.hawaii.edu/handle/10125/12080

[12]  Nathaniel B. Emerson, “Unwritten History of Hawaii: The Sacred Songs of the Hula,” Smithsonian Institution, Burau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 38 (Washington, D.C.: 1909), 11-12

[13] For a brief introduction of missionaries’ role in hula banning, see “Missionaries and the Decline of Hula,” HawaiiHistory.org (2020), http://www.hawaiihistory.org/index.cfm?fuseaction=ig.page&CategoryID=253

[14] Noenoe K.Silva, “He Kānāwai E Ho’opau I Na Hula Kuolo Hawai’i: The Political Economy of Banning the Hula,” The Hawaiian Journal of History, 34 (2000), 29-48, provides insight into hula banning. Missionary Emerson’s activity is noted at 40, 48 n32.

War God Carving Returned to Zuni Pueblo by Cowan's Auctions

In late August, a 15-inch wooden war god which had been consigned to Cowan’s Auctions was returned to Zuni Pueblo. Danica Farnand, who is Cowan’s Director of Native American art and an ATADA Board Member, recognized the cultural significance of the carving and worked with the consignor to return it through ATADA’s Voluntary Returns program.
Read more about the return of this item ➤

A Zuni Pottery Jar via Wikimedia Commons, Sailko / CC BY

A Zuni Pottery Jar
via Wikimedia Commons, Sailko / CC BY

Our commitment to building trust and finding solutions:

ATADA is committed to working with sovereign Native Nations to find solutions to issues of cultural patrimony. In 2016, ATADA created the Voluntary Returns Program which is community-based initiative designed to bring sacred and highly valued ceremonial objects to Native American tribes. Returns take place through a consultative process in which ATADA representatives work directly with community and spiritual leaders of Native Nations.

ATADA President, Kim Martindale notes:

"This Zuni War God is just one of over 300 items that the Authentic Tribal Art Dealers Association has helped to return to sovereign Native Nations. ATADA has also worked on a number of returns of objects to indigenous communities globally. As an organization, the Authentic Tribal Art Dealers Association has pursued an open dialog with Native Nations and indigenous communities in order to return essential cultural items to them on a purely voluntary basis. The items that have been returned were purchased legally. However, as our understanding developed, our art dealer members and many collectors have grown to understand how important these items are. We recognized the need to return key cultural items regardless of their legal status and that's why we started the Voluntary Returns program. We’ve also incorporated descriptions of items that are not appropriate to trade in into our organization’s Bylaws. Our commitment to work with all Native Nations and indigenous communities is clear. We want to ensure that the Native American art market remains a viable and flourishing one for both Native artists and promoters of authentic indigenous items and that it continues to work to safeguard and preserve cultural treasures."

You can learn more about the Voluntary Returns Program at: https://atada.org/voluntary-returns

World Customs Organization Report: Heritage Trafficking Is Tiny Percentage of Illegal Trade

Eight coins from Afghanistan, including two U.S. silver quarters. Courtesy World Customs Organization.

Eight coins from Afghanistan, including two U.S. silver quarters. Courtesy World Customs Organization.

In recent years, critics of the art trade, and more specifically the antiquities trade, have claimed there is a multi-billion dollar black market for illicit items which helps fund nefarious activities such as terrorism. 

The Illicit Trade Report 2019, published by the World Customs Organization, shows that the true scale of cultural property smuggling is actually quite small, especially when compared to other forms of illegal trade such as drugs, counterfeit goods and weapons. 

In his article published on Cultural Property News website, Ivan Macquisten notes that, "The 200-page Illicit Trade Report reveals that cultural property accounts for just 0.2 percent of all investigations and seizures reported by the Customs Enforcement Network." 

For some perspective, Macquisten further states, "...of the 102,214 cases investigated in 2019, just 227 involved cultural heritage. This compares to 36,264 for drugs, over 28,000 for counterfeit goods including medical supplies and over 26,000 for alcohol and tobacco..."
This small share of cases is not sufficient to fund terrorism. 

Read Macquisten's full article ➤

Download the WCO Illicit Trade Report for 2019 ➤

ATADA Foundation COVID-19 Relief Fund

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To date, we have raised over $20,000 to help provide necessary supplies, food and water to Native American communities that have been hit especially hard by the ongoing pandemic. This is an ongoing effort and we continue to seek donations until the need has passed. 

We know that times may be tight and that the future is unknown. We are asking you to give what you can. Whether it is $20 or $1,000 - any and everything helps. Please help us to reach our current goal of $30,000. 
Please visit atada.org/atada-foundation to make your tax-deductible donation today!

$20,932

Goal $30,000

Article Describes ATADA's Concerns with the STOP Act

ATADA Members and Friends,

We would like to draw your attention to a recent article on the STOP Act which was published on the Antiques and The Arts Weekly website by Greg Smith. In the article, Mr. Smith describes the various issues and causes for concern that ATADA has continued to raise with each iteration of the bill. 

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Click below to read our update on the STOP Act from earlier this month.


You can read the text of S.2165 by clicking below.

ATADA Written Testimony
June 10, 2020


Summer 2020 Update

Photo via Wikimedia Commons: Netherzone / CC BY-SA

Photo via Wikimedia Commons: Netherzone / CC BY-SA

Dear ATADA Members and Friends,
 
It that time of year again, when many of us would normally be getting ready to participate and attend the summer shows in Albuquerque and Santa Fe. Of course, many things have changed this year and we are all trying to chart a course in a rapidly evolving future. We appreciate your continued membership, support and interest in ATADA. We are continuing our mission to promote Native American and Tribal art around the world; to protect the rights of dealers, collectors and artists; and to provide humanitarian aid to those in need.
 
Despite the cancellation or postponement of the usual summer shows in Albuquerque and Santa Fe, there are number of events still happening online. Virtual markets and art walks, online auctions and streaming artist interviews are all great ways to stay involved with Tribal art. Our online calendar has more information on the various events happening in August. We are also researching new and better platforms for future ATADA online shows. In the meantime, be sure to check out the ATADA Marketplace, where you can find a rotating selection of amazing items from trusted ATADA dealers.
 
We continue to monitor developments surrounding the STOP Act and recently submitted additional written testimony to the Senate Committee on Indian Affairs. You can find the latest information and a copy of the written testimony on the ATADA Blog: https://atada.org/atada-blog/stop-act-2020-update
You can support this important work by making a making a monetary contribution or donating an item for auction.
 
We also extend our gratitude to all of you who have been able to contribute to our COVID-19 Relief Fund. With your generous support, the ATADA Foundation has raised over $20,000 to provide critical assistance and supplies to Native American tribes affected by COVID-19. We will continue this fundraising effort for as long as needed. If you are able, and would like to help, click the link below for information on how you can make a tax-deductible donation to this worthy cause.
 
As we continue through this year, let us work together to help each other through these difficult times. Let’s stay in touch with each other, share ideas and great finds, and lend a hand to those who need a little help. Together, we can make a better future for all.
 
If we can be of any assistance, please reach out to us.
Sincerely,
The ATADA Board of Directors
 
 
Links:
ATADA Calendar: https://atada.org/calendar
ATADA Marketplace: atada.org/marketplace
ATADA Directory: atada.org/full-directory
Foundation Donations: atada.org/atada-foundation
Legal Fund Info: atada.org/legal-fund

**Edit: Shows in Albuquerque were inadvertently omitted from the original post. This post has been edited to include those shows.