Honoring Harjo’s life and legacy in must-see exhibition at OSU Museum of Art
Thursday, June 6, 2024
Media Contact:
Casey Ihde | OSU Museum of Art Marketing and Communications | 405-744-2783 | casey.pankey@okstate.edu
The Oklahoma State University Museum of Art is honored to present “benjamin harjo
JR.: from here to there,” on view June 11 through Sept. 7, 2024. This exhibition offers
a rare opportunity to explore a solo presentation of artwork by OSU alumnus Benjamin
Harjo Jr. (Absentee Shawnee/Seminole, 1945–2023).
A renowned visual artist, Harjo is a beloved household name for many in Oklahoma and
beyond. Many knew him for his artistic ways and were charmed by his humor and generosity.
“We know from story after story that he was a mentor and very generous with his time.
He gave back to his community, Native and non-Native alike,” said Vicky Berry, curator
and director emerita.
Born in New Mexico, Harjo and his family moved to Oklahoma in 1945. Harjo quickly discovered
his lifelong artistic passion in comic strips and animation. He found his love for
printmaking at the recently opened Institute of American Indian Art in Santa Fe, founded
in 1962. Later, Harjo returned to Oklahoma and enrolled at OSU just before being drafted
into the U.S. Army in 1969. After serving, he returned to OSU, earned his BFA in 1974,
and began his career as an artist and mentor.
Working primarily with gouache, pen and ink, and a variety of printmaking methods,
Harjo also ventured into sculpture, jewelry, and other three-dimensional forms. He
relied on color and line to create art that spoke to the continuum of his cultures
and creativity at large.
“His ability to layer symbols and deeper cultural meaning with playfulness is very
compelling,” Berry said.
Selecting from over 400 pieces of Harjo’s work, Berry was tasked with showcasing a
lifetime of artistic production.
“He has carried on multiple themes throughout his career. Finding a difference from
his early artwork to the last is very challenging,” Berry said.
Many artists’ careers are marked with stylistic periods relating to their own artistic
development. With Harjo’s work, viewers are offered a “freshness” with his color and
pattern work. There is a complexity underlying the simplicity that intrigues and offers
a visual reward upon repeated study of his work.
In partnership with the First Americans Museum and heather ahtone, director of curatorial
affairs, a monograph will be published honoring Harjo’s life and legacy. Featuring
over 120 of Harjo’s artworks alongside essays and poems, “A Constellation of Color:
the artwork of Benjamin Harjo, Jr.” will be available for purchase at the closing
reception on Sept. 6.
“The choice of contributors was very strategic and selected with an appropriate lens
to honor his accomplishments,” Berry said. “As a university museum, we support scholarship
that can inform us all about Harjo’s impact as an artist and a member of the Indigenous
community. We hope our efforts will encourage others to support exhibitions and publish
more on Benjamin Harjo Jr. There is much more to discover and discuss.”
The museum will host a closing reception for “benjamin harjo JR.: from here to there”
from 5 – 7 p.m. on Friday, Sept. 6. The show is on view from June 11 through Sept.
7, 2024, and features approximately 86 original works spanning the length of his career.
For more on the exhibition, visit the website. Support for this exhibition has been provided by Jeanene and Ron Hulsey.
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