ART
interview by BILL POWERS
all artwork courtesy of NATALIE BALL and HALE GALLERY
born and raised in a black neighborhood in portland, oregon, artist natalie ball relocated to her ancestral native american homeland to embrace a sustainable art practice and raise her three children, teaching them the art of stinta, an ancient word for love in her tribe’s language.
BILL POWERS — Where did your love of art come from?
NATALIE BALL — I was 21 and had just started college at the University of Oregon when I saw the video Couple in the Cage: Two Undiscovered Amerindians Visit the West, by artists Coco Fusco and Guillermo Gómez-Peña, for their exhibition “The Year of the White Bear and Two Undiscovered Amerindians Visit the West.” That’s when I fell in love with art and started focusing on making art.
BILL POWERS — Do you think that, culturally, there are different ideals among the Modoc or Klamath tribes in terms of how you view love through a familial, romantic, or even community lens?
NATALIE BALL — My tribe has its own language around love. My language is older than the English language. So, stinta, a word that means “love,” is what I chose to say when communicating ideas of love. Stinta is ancient, and so are its meanings. I’m still learning my language. With learning, there is inventing. My kids and I are building a new love language that’s inherently ancient.
BILL POWERS — I see so many posts on nature on your Instagram account. Is your love of the land something you specifically try to instill in your children, or just an extension of your daily life?
NATALIE BALL — The Klamath tribes were terminated by an act of Congress in 1953. My dad’s parents relocated to Portland, Oregon, soon after the termination. My mom’s family relocated here from a rural Black community in Arkansas. I grew up in Portland’s historic Black neighborhood within an active Native community. I am giving you my background to explain the stinta I am tracing, the stinta I am pulling from. We are all headed back to the land. It was a conscious decision to return to my ancestral homelands and raise my kids, to learn food sovereignty, and to create a studio practice. Accessing our homelands is an act of resistance, just like stinta, just like motherhood. If I can hold space for my kids to connect to their homeland, to experience joy, and to fall in love with it and their communities, then they will be the next generation to stinta and protect it.
BILL POWERS — The ultimate act of love is to make sacrifices for your kids. You recently donated one of your kidneys to your daughter.
NATALIE BALL — To give life, twice to my daughter has been a huge privilege. The year after I graduated from Yale, she went into kidney failure. I returned home to my family and started working full-time in the studio, with hopes of creating a sustainable studio practice. I started exhibiting my work — much of this was with you, with Half Gallery. That was an epic year, publicly and privately.
BILL POWERS — Some of the masks you make on metal spikes are a tribute to your ancestors. Can you tell us about that story from your origins?
NATALIE BALL — My ancestors are many: the ancient ones, the unborn, the rural south runners, the Modoc War’s hung and beheaded, the spectators, the Middle Passage survivors, the unsurvived, the mamas and aunties, the no-names, the babies, the soldiers, the imagined. My metal-spiked sculptures are the Pussy Hats. They were a play on that year’s Pussy Hat movement — a movement that I didn’t see myself in. It was a gesture to put forward narratives in sculpture form that I felt were excluded from that movement, within a nation that habitually erases my people and history.
BILL POWERS — I found your When I Go Missing so moving. It’s about the plight of Native American women who vanish in alarming numbers, right?
NATALIE BALL — Knowing the statistics as an Indigenous woman who is Black and Indian, I was thinking through the reality of being murdered or going missing. It is
a reality that is not if, but when. I created tools charged with material meaning to be used to find my way back home, and tools to be used to find me. MMIW, or Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, is yet another epidemic, but it’s not new. Black liberation is tied to Indigenous sovereignty, though not mutually exclusive. We need the Black Lives Matter movement — it’s a catalyst for real change, a collective shift of consciousness — for our epidemics to be visible and addressed.
END
[Table of contents]
Edito
by Olivier Zahm
true love
text by Glenn O'Brien
library of love
text by Paul B. Preciado
cover #2 aa bronson
interview by Jérôme Sans
jenna gribbon
interview
no ordinary love
text by Brad Phillips
femmunism
text by McKenzie Wark
somaya critchlow
interview
love comes first
text by Donatien Grau
david hockney
interview
cover #15 francis picabia
text by Arnauld Pierre
sarah lucas
interview
the 25th hour
text by Claire Fontaine
paris
by Olivier Zahm
cover #3 balenciaga f/w 20/21
photography by Juergen Teller
london
by Benedict Brink
new york
by Zora Sicher
aa bronson
interview
nevine mahmoud
interview
cover #1 jenna gribbon
interview by Olivier Zahm
nicolas party
interview
cover #7 givenchy matthew williams
interview by Olivier Zahm
israel fernández
by Suffo Moncloa
balenciaga f/w 2020/21
by Juergen Teller
ed atkins
interview
bertrand boutron
interview
barbara t. smith
text
nordstrom
by Jason Rodgers
cover #11 au départ
photography by Olivier Zahm
dior cruise 2021
by Laura Coulson
gucci f/w 2020/21
by Bruce Gilden
urs fischer
interview
cover #5 dior cruise 2021
photography by Laura Coulson
pierre cardin
interview
marlon magnée
interview
givenchy matthew williams
by Olivier Zahm
regina demina
interview
hen yanni and imre van opstal
interview
hans bellmer
portfolio
gender
by Katerina Jebb
cover #10 virgil abloh
interview by Olivier Zahm
saint laurent f/w 2020/21
by Katja Rahlwes
francesco vezzoli
interview
fendi f/w 2020/21
by Brett Lloyd
virgil abloh
by Carlijn Jacobs
sick of love
by Pierre-Ange Carlotti
cover #14 louis vuitton f/w 2020/21
photography by Casper Sejersen
au départ
by Olivier Zahm
camille henrot
interview
kenzo f/w 2020/21
by Olivier Zahm
cover #4 nordstrom
photography by Jason Rodgers
charles de vilmorin
interview
prada f/w 2020/21
by Cedric Buchet
chanel cruise 2021
by Dario Catellani
harris reed
interview
emotional dependence: a mystery solved
text by Natacha Calestrémé
louis vuitton f/w 2020/21
by Casper Sejersen
takuro kuwata
text by Jeff Rian
marie sauvage
interview
cover #6 gucci f/w 2020/21
photography by Bruce Gilden
vincent darré
interview
philippe parreno
interview
pygmalion and your love life
text by Alain de Botton
amanda charchian
interview
cover #13 kenzo f/w 2020/21
interview and photography by Olivier Zahm
my love stories
text by Simon Liberati
paul mccarthy
portfolio
love letters
by Katerina Jebb
cover #9 fendi f/w 2020/21
photography by Brett Lloyd
french kiss
text by Frédéric Beigbeder
kabul, day for night
short story by Anna Dubosc
david horvitz
portfolio
love is…
by Ola Rindal
laila gohar
interview
natalie ball
interview
love, a domestic mystery
text by Emanuele Coccia
that’s what love is
text by Alejandro Jodorowsky
rachael allen
poetry
the art instinct: beauty, pleasure, and love
text by Jeff Rian
cover #8 saint laurent f/w 2020/21
photography by Katja Rahlwes
deana lawson
interview
cover #12 chanel cruise 2021
photography by Dario Catellani
francis picabia
portfolio
song
by Allen Ginsberg
cover #16 dash snow
by Dash Snow
black lives matter
tribute by Maurizio Cattelan
valentino
by Olivier Zahm