Visit Stonington Gallery in December 2022 to see several of Eechdaa’s masks on display
Category: Exhibitions
-

Staff in Tlingit CEO Ensemble
Stonington Gallery in Seattle, WA, currently has on exhibit “Tlingit CEO Ensemble,” created by sisters Lily Hope and Ursula Hudson. Included with it is the Octopus Tentacle Cane, hand-carved Western Red Cedar by Tlingit artist Eechdaa (Dave Ketah).
UPDATE – 11/16/2022 Items is no longer on display at Stonington. This page will be updated with new location once available.
This piece will be on display at the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum from May 2023 – April 2024







-

Washington State History Museum
In The Spirit – Contemporary Native Arts, 17th Annual Exhibition.
Tacoma, WA – June 11 through September 11, 2022.
IN THE SPIRIT is an annual summer celebration of diverse Native American arts and culture. A juried exhibition of exciting new works by contemporary Native artists opens in June and is on view through the summer at the Washington State History Museum, accompanied by programs, artist talks, and an Artist Awards event.


Read more about the exhibit, and events at the Washington State Historical Museum.
-

Sheldon Jackson Museum
Alaska Native Artist Residency Program.
Sitka, AK – July 8 through July 30, 2022.
Eechdaa is the first in the lineup for the Sheldon Jackson Museum’s Alaska Native Artist Residency Program for 2022!
Eechdaa Dave Ketah is a Tlingit carver, drum maker and painter. He will be the artist-in-residence at the Sheldon Jackson Museum and working most days at the museum from July 8th until July 30th.
Ketah was born and raised in Ketchikan. His ancestors are the Hinyaa from the south of Lingít aani (Tlingit land – Southeast Alaska). For years, what he knew about his Tlingit identity came from what his grandmother taught him as a boy. Living outside Lingít aani for most of his adult life, he struggled against assimilation into the dominant culture through learning from reading, the internet, and museum visits.
The pandemic opened new opportunities and was the catalyst in Ketah becoming a practicing student of his language and the creative expressions of formline design, carving, and regalia making.
Ketah pursues growth as an artist with a passionate approach and prolific productivity.
He and his wife have two children, who are also just beginning to explore their Tlingit and Inupiat heritage.
UPDATE – Artifacts Talk by Eechdaa August 25, 2022
UPDATE – Did the Ancestors Call it Art?: An Artist Talk by Eechdaa August 24, 2022
UPDATE – Listen to Eechdaa‘s interview on Raven Radio July 22, 2022
UPDATE – Formline drawing basics class announced June 22, 2022

