Raven Halfmoon: Flags of Our Mothers
Raven Halfmoon: Flags of Our Mothers (installation view), The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, June 25, 2023 to January 7, 2024. Photo by Jason Mandella.
Raven Halfmoon: Flags of Our Mothers (installation view), The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, June 25, 2023 to January 7, 2024. Photo by Jason Mandella.
Raven Halfmoon: Flags of Our Mothers
November 18, 2026 - May 24, 2027Mary LeFlore Clements Oklahoma Gallery
Admission is always free; tickets are not required
Flags of Our Mothers is the first major traveling exhibition for artist Raven Halfmoon. Her practice spans torso-scaled and colossal-sized stoneware sculptures, with some soaring up to twelve feet and
weighing over eight hundred pounds. With inspirations that orbit centuries from ancient Indigenous pottery to Moai statues to Land Art, Halfmoon interrogates the intersection of tradition, history, gender, and personal experience.
Halfmoon, who was born and raised in Norman, Oklahoma, learned about ceramics as a teenager from a Caddo elder. Working mainly in portraiture, she handbuilds each work using a coil method. Her surfaces are expressive and show deep finger impressions and dramatic dripping glazes—a physicality that presents her as both maker and matter. She fuses Caddo pottery traditions (a history of making mostly done by women) with more contemporary gestures, often tagging her work as a reference to Caddo tattooing and ancient pottery motifs. Her works reflect stories of the Caddo Nation, specifically her feminist lineage and the power of its complexities.
For this exhibition, organized by The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum and Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts, Halfmoon created some of her largest works to date, including Flagbearer, a three-part stacked ceramic sculpture standing over twelve feet tall.
Raven Halfmoon is an artist and sculptor from Norman, Oklahoma. She is a citizen of the Caddo Nation and also Choctaw, Delaware, and Otoe Missouria. Halfmoon holds a double bachelor’s degree from the University of Arkansas, where she majored in ceramics/painting and cultural anthropology.
Halfmoon’s sculptures are in the permanent collections of the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art; the Detroit Institute of Arts; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; and the Montclair Art Museum. In 2023, she was selected as an Eiteljorg Contemporary Art Fellow (Eiteljorg Museum, Indianapolis, IN), and in 2024, she was a finalist for the international Loewe Craft Prize (Loewe Foundation, Madrid, Spain).
Halfmoon is represented by Kouri + Corrao Gallery in Santa Fe, NM, and by Ross + Kramer Gallery in New York, NY. Salon 94 represented her for her solo exhibition in September 2024.
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