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“It has been really interesting working with Brian because it’s NOT about the print, it’s about the message. You can’t even really tell that it’s an etching”  -Peter Braune

Artist Brian Jungen in collaboration with Peter Braune at New Leaf Editions  creates two-sided prints from archival newspaper clippings, revealing the lens of otherness through which Native people are frequently viewed. “It was always about inequality but it wasn’t really from the Native person’s perspective,” says Jungen of the newspaper articles. “These are the stories I would have read as a kid and they would have made me feel really bad about being Native.”

By reproducing both sides of the clippings on corresponding sides of his prints, Jungen highlights the often disparate realities faced by Native and non-Native people. The artist draws from a strong tradition of printmaking in First Nations communities, especially those closer to the Arctic. Artists such as Kenojuak Ashevak employ bilateral symmetry to depict the duality of an image, and in the same way Jungen illustrates the two sides of Native and non-Native life in his prints.

Check out Art 21’s exclusive video to learn about the printmaking process and to hear what Brian has to say.

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