Gina Siepel

Gina Siepel

  • Projects
    • To Understand a Tree (work in process)
      • Tree and Site
      • Participants and Public Engagement
      • Green Woodworking
    • Cycle of Self-Determination
    • SELF-MADE
    • Re-Surveying Walden
    • The Versatile Queer-All
    • 1 x 1
    • A River Twice
    • The Boy Mechanic Project
    • The Coracles of Pignut Pond
    • The Candidate is Absent
    • CACOPHONY
    • Audubon's Birds
    • Portrait of Audubon
    • After Winslow Homer
    • Emma's Walk
    • King Philip Was a Warrior Bold, Whose Deeds Were Writ in Records Old
    • Historic Site
    • Recursions
  • About
  • CV
  • Writing
    • "Gina Siepel: The Artist as Explorer," by Lauren Lessing
  • Contact
King Philip Was a Warrior Bold, Whose Deeds Were Writ in Records Old, He Through New England's Woods Did Roam, and Sorrow Brought to Many a Home
2009
Removable Wall Vinyl on Existing Wallpaper
variable
Detail image, battle scene and King Philip. documentation of site-specific installation at the Peabody Historical Society in Peabody, Massachusetts


This work was made as a site specific installation in the main stairwell of the Osborne-Salata House at the Peabody Historical Society in Peabody, Massachusetts. Artists were invited to make a piece in response to the museum's collection. Upon touring the site, I was struck by the assumption that North American history begins with European presence: walking around the rooms of the house and looking at the artifacts displayed there, I thought I would have had no idea that North America was inhabited by humans prior to European colonization, if I hadn't entered with that knowledge.

I began reading about King Philip's War, a violent conflict between the English and the Wampanoag that began in 1675, and raged over the entire state of Massachusetts. This work samples from historic paintings and engravings depicting this war and re-presents these violent images over the museum's French toile wallpaper, which features idyllic vignettes of Europeans frolicking in a pastoral landscape.

All images and text copyright 2006-2019 Gina Siepel. All rights reserved.

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