Oakland Museum of California Oakland Museum of California Exhibitions ExhibitionsYour VistShop with Us
SupportMembershipAbout Us
Oakland Museum of California Oakland Museum of California

| Current Exhibitions | Upcoming Exhibitions |
|
Exhibition Archive |

Oakland Museum of California Calendar
Departments
Online Resources
Contact Us
Site Map

September 13, 1997 to November 30, 1997
Memory and Imagination:
The Legacy of Maidu Indian Artist Frank Day

Presented by the History Department

Memory and imagination inform creative work, indeed all life -- imagination dipping constantly into wells of memory, memory calling on imagination to interpret experience. The title Memory and Imagination for an exhibition at the Oakland Museum of California of 47 paintings by the Maidu Indian artist Frank Day (1902-1976) was chosen because both are essential to an understanding of his work. The paintings, made during the final two decades of his life, describe Konkow Maidu ways, rituals and ceremonies through memory, imagination and improvisation. They will be on display at the museum through October 19, 1997.

 

Memory and Imagination:
The Legacy of Maidu Indian Artist Frank Day

by Abby Wasserman
Oakland Museum of California Spring 1997 magazine


"Memory is a subjective thing; all experience is," says Oregon anthropologist Rebecca Dobkins, the exhibition's guest curator, who wrote her Ph.D. dissertation on the artist. "But memory necessarily involves imagining the past, and so memory is not some kind of unfiltered truth or reality or object we can project outward into Day's paintings. Without imagination, we would have no memory. We must use our creative modes of thought to construct from the past what gives meaning to our lives in the present. Even though Frank Day himself spoke of his work as though it was documentation-and he stressed that it was the truth and he could take you to it -- what moves me is the incredibly creative spin he put on memory."

Without imagination, we would have no memory. We must use our creative modes of thought to construct from the past what gives meaning to our lives in the present.

We know more than we realize. As tree rings record the life of a tree, we record the past through gestures, experiences and particularly language. If we also live in an ancestral environment where prominent features of the landscape are virtually unchanged between generations, we can intuit a lot about our ancestors' influences and experiences.

Environment is probably the most important link on this chain to the past, and a basis of identity for many people. Frank Day's home environment was the northern California region of the middle fork of the Feather River, one of the most beautiful places on earth. The sentinel-like Bald Rock overlooks hilly, forested country one side and a breathtaking river canyon on the other. The swift, singing river in its bed of white, water-sculpted boulders, the fragrant vegetation and sweeping upward vistas are unforgettable. Such a place resides in the heart of a people. This still-remote, bountiful and regenerating place is Konkow Maidu country.

Day's mother died when he was two, and spent his early childhood in the Berry Creek area with his father, Billy Day, and grandmother. He then lived eight years away from home in a boarding school for Indian children. As a young man he left California, traveling throughout the west, returning to his home territory only in the 1930s. He took up painting after his legs were injured in a serious accident. His first subjects were non-Indian, but soon his interest changed to Maidu themes, and his calling became communicating what he knew and felt about the ceremonies, stories and experiences of his people.

He found his first supporter in anthropologist Donald Jewell of American River College and his student Lyle Scott; later, there would be others. With the coming construction of the Oroville Dam, great expanses of traditional Konkow country were going to be flooded, and so a lot of "salvage" archaelogogy and anthropology were in process. This coincided with Day's mission to share his culture, and he did so through many avenues -- talking, writing, tape recording, singing and teaching dance; but chiefly and, most powerfully, by painting. In 1973 his reputation as an artist had spread to art dealer Herb Puffer, who wrote asking to handle his work at Pacific WesternTraders in Folsom. Puffer played a supportive role for the last three years of Day's life, encouraging him, buying and showing his art, and providing him with materials.

Language is where we store our experiences and observations. It is the repository and indicator of culture, forming over time through the life of a people. Frank Day was translating the Maidu language into visual terms. "Day believed that one's language shapes the way one views reality," Dobkins says. "He felt that Konkow Maidu speakers view the world differently than English speakers do, in part because of that language.

"The linguist Edward Sapir says we don't all live in the same world with just different labels attached. Frank, not knowing Sapir, believed that knowing the Konkow language was the route into the Konkow world view. Rather than translating into another language, English, having to rely on imperfections of translation, he would do it visually. In the English language there is no translation for 'acorn wedge' in Konkow because non-Indians don't use this tool. Showing a basket and its use, a roundhouse and its use, rather than telling about it in English, was for him an intermediate level of translation. It was not as good as knowing it in Konkow, but it was better than learning it in English, because it was coming from his mind."

Like many strong and imaginative individuals who put themselves forward, Frank Day had a vision and pursued it. His father had been a headman, a leader respected by his contemporaries. More of a loner, Frank nevertheless put on his father's mantle, dedicating himself to communicating Maidu culture, and his influence reached to anthropologists and young Indian artists and dancers.

"Often when we think of artistic influence we think of style issues, content issues, composition issues, that artists are responding to or working against some element of another's art," Dobkins says. "Frank Day has meant something more of a holistic influence. In other words, his example of affirming Maidu traditions, saying they are worthy of celebrating, worthy of artistic energy, gave younger people affirmation they needed."

When Day first started painting, self-representation for Native Californians was unusual. They were an almost invisible people. The 1960s and 1970s saw emerging activism and efforts to raise public consciousness on issues such as Indian education. Speaking into his tape recorder in August,1974, Day showed he, too, was trying to raise consciousness. "One of the reasons I'm doing this is to make these things clear, that one day it may be used for a good purpose. It's going to shoot all of your imaginations of what a California Indian is, because you don't know it. You don't know much about 'em, unless you are one....The hardest part is how the suffering is, because you'd have to be born like one."

Younger native artists, listening to Day's stories and seeing his paintings, felt empowered and inspired. In the exhibition, illustrating some of Day's legacy, are works by three of the artists he influenced -- Dal Castro, Harry Fonseca and Judith Lowry. Another artist, Frank Lapena, worked with Day to form the Maidu Dancers and Traditionalists, some of whom make traditional regalia, sing, drum and dance, carrying on the essence and spirit of their forebears. Herb Puffer and his wife, Peggy, provided space for their rehearsals and performances.

"Harry Fonseca always says that Frank Day was magic in more ways than one," Dobkins says. "It's, to me, the phrase that captures Day. He was mysterious; he was mystical; he was exasperating; he was magic in the good sense, and maybe in the more difficult sense. Any charismatic person is powerful and sort of overwhelming, and that is my feeling of Frank Day."

Rebecca Dobkins never met Frank Day, but through her research she has come to know him in a certain way. His great accomplishment as a painter, she believes, is that over time his increasing creativity and skill went hand-in-hand with trying to communicate his Maidu world view. This view, full of dignity, joy and beauty, does not turn away from death or suffering. Sorrow, loss and displacement are frequent and powerful themes in his paintings, represented poetically and symbolically as well as literally.

The Maidu men and women in his paintings live in another age, carrying on lives of stability and harmony in and around the central roundhouse. They hunt, fish, cook, care for their children, play games; they dance, engage in healing practices, die and mourn loved ones. The attitude of the artist towards these shades the non-Indian reaction to them. Without preaching, he leads us to the heart of his interpretations of Konkow Maidu people's inner lives.

As the Konkow world is beautiful, it is also dangerous. Displacement is a frequent theme in the work -- as are the actions of rising, falling, spitting out, grasping and letting go. As the Earth Trembles (1967) shows the Maidu world in chaos. A roundhouse is in flames, a hot spring gushes forth from a gash in the earth, children are helpless, a woman, bound to a tree, watches in horror as her man is dragged to his death by a white horse symbolizing white colonization.

Other paintings simply illustrate conflicts that exist in nature: King Snake and Rattlesnake (1962) shows traditional enemies in a life-and-death struggle. Two Eagles (1967) is a fierce air battle. Mourning at Mineral Springs (1973) illustrates a spring turned sulfurous by upheavals during an earthquake. A man has been poisoned by the surfurous water and is mourned by howling coyotes. The palate is somber, the shadows are deep and dramatic, and dark clouds advance.

Transformation is a constant in Day's work -- and spirits, humans and animals merge and interact. Nature is the setting: water -- creeks, falls, pools and rivers; land -- hills, mountains, gullies, crevices, plains, rocks, stones, trees, plants. The imprints of animals and humans cross on the earth; the clouds, stars, sun, moon, sunsets and sunrises mark the passage of time. Fire burns, cooks, heals, carries spirits to the next world.

The paintings are full of motion and opposites -- a shaman rises, a hunter falls, a whirlwind spits out ill doers -- yet there is a sinuous connection between everything. In the glowing painting Ishi at Iamin Mool, Day's recollection of a meeting with the famous Yahi Indian when he was a child with his father, everything is connected. This was apparently a few days before Ishi, his hair shorn in mourning, came out of hiding in Oroville and fell into the white man's curious world. Day paints a healing circle of sun, water, touch, tree and sky.

This painting is also important because it shows Ishi as a man of healing power and dignity, his hair long -- not shorn and forlorn, as he appears in the earliest photographs. No one knows if Day really saw Ishi, but it is possible, and he says he did. This is the kind of memory he could bind with imagination and interpret with the wisdom of a man of mature years who reflected deeply on the nature of things.

"I think that certainly he is, at these shining moments, doing what he set out to do: translate the Konkow language, the Maidu world view," Dobkins says. "He doesn't do that in a strictly documentary way; it's these elements of imagination that richly and emotionally convey the sense of connectedness with earth, one another, animals."

Asked her favorites among Day's paintings, Dobkins cites Fish Dancer , "an image of such joy to me. A fisherman has caught an enormous sturgeon and is dancing in its skin. These were incredible fish! It would have represented a tremendous force of will to have caught one. The joy the fisherman has -- the painting is full of life.

"Another painting that's very moving is The Burning, in part because of the great detail in the painting, the sense of the person being honored, clearly identified by the dance regalia. The fire itself, smoke coiling out of canvas, the dark night, the light of the fire, the presence of the spirit effigy. As an anthropologist I find it a remarkable image, that he represented it in this painting is important in recording of Konkow culture. That's an excellent example of what Day was trying to do.

"I like all of the roundhouse paintings," she continues, "because of the loving care that went into painting the details of their construction, the different settings they're in, the one at night is a serene image. He also did Home of a Tribal Leader from a photograph, showing his father and friends, which he embellished by inserting details to bring the scene to life. The photograph is supposed to be unadulterated reality; he illuminates it with memory."

It's not the first time Day's work has been exhibited at the Oakland Museum of California -- in 1984 and again in 1986, Day paintings were part of group shows -- but this time, says Carey T. Caldwell, Chief Curator of History, the museum is participating in a new way. "In the process of Rebecca's research, and in our own work to further document our collections, we realized that our founding curator, Charles P. Wilcomb, had assembled a number of objects from the Berry Creek and Bald Rock area during Frank Day's childhood. One was collected in Billy Day's camp. Many of these are very rare objects of their type, and one is the only known example in museum collections anywhere.

Through outreach efforts in conjunction with the exhibition, we are seeking to create a situation where there can be more reunions between people and objects. We are expecting a number of people who are direct descendants from those who made and used objects Wilcomb collected."

Frank Day made 70 hours of tape recordings, some with an interviewer, many of them alone. He said that he was talking for people in the future who would use his tapes to good purpose. At times during her study, Dobkins believed he was talking to her, though he died when she was in high school. She has always gravitated to older people. "I find their reflection on experience so important to understanding what life's all about without having to reinvent every square inch of it," she says.

Her mother, Betty, was an historian and a gifted storyteller, both historical stories and also family stories. "She made my grandmother and maternal great grandmother living presences in my life through her stories. She helped me understand that stories are what make us who we are. Stories about our family inform us about where we come from, and stories of the past inform us about where we go as a people and society; and stories shape and enrich present experience."

Rebecca Dobkins brought this curiosity to her study of Frank Day, and was rewarded by patience. "He spoke very much in a stream-of-consciousness manner," she says. "Very little of the recordings or writings are clearly organized or punctuated. They do not follow concise, linear lines at all. They seemed rambling and confusing at first. But the more I listened, the more I understood that part of what was true for him was that everything had so much meaning, associations, layers of memory, that his way of expressing it was through digression, embroidering and coloring, in paintings and the language."

Placing together of Day's paintings with objects familiar to him, some used by people he knew, makes this exhibition a very personal one. In the years of research, Dobkins came to know Frank Day as any biographer comes to know her subject; but eventually, academic interest was exceeded by her sense of involvement with a remarkable person.

"Part of the process of doing biography is trying to get into someone's head, or skin, or self," she says. "What initially was very difficult was that his world and his world view are so much a Konkow Maidu view, one not my own, and no amount of academic research could help me fully understand that world. His paintings in particular, but also his talk, have helped me think about that world. I feel he's inseparable from it. The more I've gotten to know him, his work, his words, the richer and more complex a human being he seems."

Art is a more direct medium than words, when the art is good. The immediate, visceral impressions one receives from Day's best work show that in painting, he discovered the rhythm and heart of his message to the world.

NOTE: This article is copyrighted. No reproduction, complete or in part, is allowed without written permission. Write Editor, The Museum of California Magazine, Oakland Museum of California, 1000 Oak St., Oakland, CA 94607.

 

© 1999 Oakland Museum of California | Credits |Phone: 510-238-2200