Rose B. Simpson (Santa Clara Pueblo)
Music Credits: “NY” composed and performed by Kosta T, from the cd Soul Sand; used courtesy of the Free Music Archive
Jo Reed: From the National Endowment for the Arts, this is Art Works. I’m Josephine Reed. Today, we’re celebrating Native American Heritage Month with a conversation with Rose B.Simpson, an artist from Santa Clara Pueblo whose work expands the boundaries of Native American art with profound and innovative sculptures, installations, and performance pieces. Rose’s creations explore resilience, cultural legacy, and our relationship with the land—reflecting a blend of traditional influences, contemporary themes, and bold implementation.
Recently, Rose was commissioned by the Madison Square Park Conservancy to create Seed, a monumental installation that invites reflection on place and history within New York City’s urban landscape. Her deep connection to her heritage informs her work, as seen in everything from Seed to her striking clay figures to Maria, her iconic 1985 El Camino reimagined as a sculptural homage to Pueblo potter Maria Martinez, complete with a traditional black-on-black pottery design.
Rose B Simpson is joining me to discuss her art, deeply rooted in her role as a member of Santa Clara Pueblo and how cultural heritage and artistic exploration intersect in powerful, transformative ways. Rose welcome—thank you for joining me.
Rose B. Simpson: Yeah. Thank you for having me.
Jo Reed: You were invited to create large-scale public art to help mark the 20th anniversary season of the Madison Park Art Conservancy—a season that received funding from the NEA. You created Seed—and it was an installation in two parks in Manhattan is in two parks, Madison Square Park in lower midtown and Inwood Hill Park at the top of Manhattan. Will you describe that public installation is before we talk about it?
Rose B. Simpson: So, there's seven 18-foot tall steel and bronze sentinels that are encircling a bronze larger-than-life bust who is sort of planting herself in a grouping of indigenous plants. Her eyes are closed and she's holding herself and then there's another part of that installation up at Inwood Hill Park and there's two bronze miniatures-- so, they're only seven feet-- of the sentinel forms that are facing in towards the natural environment and then out and towards like sort of the man-made world.
Jo Reed: What inspired the use of such large-scale figures, and I'm thinking about Madison Square Park, those seven, in such an urban public space? And how do they connect with the history of that land and the Lenape people?
Rose B. Simpson: I often take my inspiration from actually being present in a place. So, I couldn't have my concept or my idea come to me until I actually visited Madison Square Park and spent some time there and so, I went to go visit that space and sit in the space and ask the space what it needed me to tell, to speak for it in a way, like what it needed me to convey through the tools that I have and one of the main things that stood out for me was that the park itself is sort of a haven in this really intense city. I'm not a city person. I live in Northern New Mexico in Santa Clara Pueblo and it's pretty rural. So, cities are really intense for me and so, the park itself becomes sort of like a respite from this intense, man-made, energetic vortex that is the city. So, I see things as sort of vessels. So, our bodies are vessels, our vehicles are vessels, our homes are vessels and the park itself has these walls and then this floor and it represents as this vessel. So, I wanted to recreate that feeling of the monstrosity of architecture and how you enter into this space to let go or release in a place where you're on all the time. So, that was kind of to make it in situ, it sure doesn't look monumental because of the nature of the city itself, but it really is. Eighteen feet is really large, but it had to hold its own space and, in a sense, the sentinels reflect that architecture and mimic the way that the park itself feels. In a place like New York, I know that there's millions of stories and not just of our generations, but all the stories that came before of the original inhabitants of the places whose ancestral homelands are under those buildings, to the enslaved and degraded people throughout time who have been a part of the making of that place and their difficult stories and lives and I think about those things and I try and close my eyes and feel them. Because we can't heal if we forget how to listen to something bigger than human voices and sounds we make. And I really believe in that and so, in those moments where we can let go and find that reconnection to something that's bigger than us, then we can begin to heal.
Jo Reed: I wonder how the experience of working in two very different New York City parks, one all the way uptown, the other one downtown-ish, how that might have expanded your vision for Seed, especially considering Madison Square Park is so urban and believe it or not, Inwood Hill Park for Manhattan is really kind of natural. It's a natural space. So, I'm curious how that expanded your vision or challenged it.
Rose B. Simpson: What was really cool about Inwood Hill Park was that I learned that Inwood Hill Park has some of the last remaining natural formations and landscape that's there in that area. So, that was really special to me. I always wonder when I go someplace "What did this land look like before we turned it into a city, before it was colonized, before we subjected it to capitalism and our current values and world?" So, a place like Inwood Hill Park really showed me some of the beauty that once existed below Manhattan, below the city. So, I think instead of the sentinels being these protective elements there, they became, for me, a reflection and the way that they stand shoulder to shoulder, one facing into the woods and one facing out over the park and the river, that they're in a state of reflection and state of consideration about what we've done and what we're doing, where we come from and where we're going. And then to have that generational accountability is super important. So, as we reflect and consider and attune ourselves to sort of a deeper consciousness of what's going on, that we can also lead and demonstrate how to do this for the next generations, so that we can survive what might be coming our way.
Jo Reed: Well, I want to know a little bit more about you. You come from a long line of ceramic artists in the Santa Clara Pueblo. Tell me how art was part of the woof and the warp as you were growing up, just so braided into your life.
Rose B. Simpson: So, my mother is ceramicist, my grandma was a potter, my great-grandma was a potter, my great-great-grandma, etc. So, through my matrilineal side, I was given access and shown clay and when I was a kid, every mom that I knew, every grandma, every auntie were working on pottery. They all did pottery and I remember being in the tribal day school and we had to talk about what our moms did for a living and one of the kids said her mom was the manager at Sonic and I remember it kind of melting my brain. I didn't think moms did anything but pottery. That was like the way things are. In the small, intimate history and delicate nature of this cultural perseverance that we're in, it really is special and I think it's incredible that we're still a part of this lineage and we're still walking in the hills behind our homes and seeing the pots, the shards, the broken pieces of the pots that our great-great-great-great grandmas made right there. all those layers of history and connection are still really apparent and vibrant. I've studied in Japan and I did some exchange work in South Korea and if you really think about the history of ceramics in that area, it makes us look like we're really fresh to ceramics when we don't have like our 13,000-year-old pots. But it's still a very vibrant and imbued dedication because clay is not just something aesthetic. It's actually a person in our world. It's a being. It's someone and that someone grows our food, that someone is our home, that someone is the vessel that we eat out of and then we pray with. So, because we're in the high desert southwest, the earth is visible and she's an active participant in our reality in so many ways.
Jo Reed: Well, you chose to stay in New Mexico. You went to the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque and then the Institute of American Indian Arts. But then for graduate school for an MFA, you decided to go to the Rhode Island School of Design. What informed these decisions?
Rose B. Simpson: Actually, I was the valedictorian from high school and I got accepted to Dartmouth and I remember thinking that "If the world ended, I couldn't walk home from Dartmouth." I just had this really sinking feeling that if all the infrastructure and the government collapsed and all that we knew and took for granted, phones and cars and trains and planes, if it all disappeared or stopped working, that I couldn't find my way home. My great grandpa went to the Indian School in Albuquerque and Albuquerque is about, I don't know how many miles, but I think it's over 60, but it's like an hour and a half drive from my home. And he used to run home on the weekends and he would run up the river and sometimes he would sleep in a cave and I always thought "As long as I know where the Rio Grande River, our main river here is, then I know where I am and I know I can get home, no matter what happens." I think I was too young, and I needed to know that I still had that connection to home and that if anything happened, I could follow the river north and end up in my pueblo, where my family is and my context and what's most important to me. So, I chose to go to UNM in Albuquerque because of that and then I ended up at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe for undergrad, which was really important. I think that going to the Santa Fe Indian School for high school and then the Institute of American Indian Arts, I made some of the most important friends and connections in my life. That kind of community that we build, even though it might be remote or on the internet, or that we're traveling this path together, in a sense. We're co-creating what is Indian art or this idea of who we become, in a sense. I think artists oftentimes are the explorers, are the trackers of the future and we're trying to do this together and with agency and accountability and responsibility and awareness of each other and support. But when I went to the Rhode Island School of Design, I couldn't walk home from Rhode Island and I think that I was ready to find home inside of me, and be able to take that with me and have that kind of faith in that which I carry within me, which actually led me to study in Japan. And I can't walk home from Japan. So, that set me in a really vulnerable space. But I think that vulnerability really pushed me to learn the most and so, I'm super grateful for those times that I was brave enough to journey into my discomfort.
Jo Reed: Tell me about more about that journey and what you learned?
Rose B. Simpson: I think being at RISD was really, really, really important for me and that was because I was exploring the process and as a metaphor for life, in a sense, that compassionate process, mostly because I held such a critical view of growth and healing and learning and evolving and that if I could explore uncomfortable states in my creative process that expresses and manifests visually for the outside world to see that I can have compassion and patience and care for that same process within my heart, within my soul, deep inside. And so, I feel like graduate school was super, super important to allow me that journey into the unknown and the scary things around process and I think that if you go to graduate school, and you don't do what scares you, then you're kind of wasting your time, personally. So, I think that exploring different ways to build with clay, playing around with size and scale and how that feels and then really digging into performance art, studying performance art, writing about it and then being in a place like Rhode Island and falling in love with somewhere that wasn't home and also, as someone who has lived most of her life on my ancestral homelands, in my tribal community, to be an outsider, to be someone who's not from a place, to be a guest and to figure out how to navigate that respectfully, that's a very, very vulnerable state to be in when you're aware and conscious that you are a guest in someone else's home, changes the way you be. And I think, being in Japan, there's no way I can fake it, to pretend I'm from there. I don't speak the language. I don't look right. So, that was an incredible experience in that vulnerability and that discomfort of an outsider and that, I think, is incredible. If I could sit with that suspended disbelief as long as possible, I think it would grow me the most.
Jo Reed: Was it in Japan where you began to intentionally leaving imperfections in your work visible—for example intentionally leaving thumbprints, showing seams, -- not having this flawless finish on your pieces, so the process is clearly visible.
Rose B. Simpson: I think I already started exploring that. I had a couple incredible teachers. One was Shannon Goff and the other was Linda Sormin, who really pushed me in my practice to go outside of my comfort zone. But by the time I got to Japan, I think that process was becoming holistic, where I understood the compassion. They talk about “wabi-sabi” and finding beauty in the broken, finding absolute serenity in showing the process of something. I think that I found in Japan and actually in my studies in relational aesthetics and aesthetics of the everyday, that there was a deep correlation and connection between Japanese culture, or what I saw of it as an outsider, and our ancestral belief systems and relationship to land and place, that I was really trying to define and be able to communicate to people who didn't fully understand that. I was finding in Japanese culture, a lot of the references and resources I needed to explain that, which I was trying to convey about where I was coming from and what I was trying to communicate. But I ended up going back to school for a second master's in creative nonfiction, intentionally to write that scholarly text on indigenous aesthetics that I felt was missing from what I needed as a reference in graduate school.
Jo Reed: You also went to an automotive school,which I think is amazing.
Rose B. Simpson: Yeah. (laughter)
Jo Reed: What compelled this?
Rose B. Simpson: So, the town that's adjacent to my homeland, my reservation is called Española, New Mexico and that's like our town. It is the lowrider capital of the world and so, I grew up really-- my youth culture was really embedded in lowrider culture and Chicano culture. So, when I was studying performance art, I was thinking so much about the example of relational aesthetics or aesthetics of the everyday in a lowrider car. That here is something that's not considered art necessarily. It's a car. But it creates and conveys and produces an aesthetic experience where the moment becomes the art itself. And I became so caught by that which I absolutely adored and loved about being from my town and what's so interesting is like the cruise line was so important in my town as a teenager because we didn't have cell phones yet and so, in order to have a social life, you needed a car to drive up and down the road and to find all your buddies because they were also all driving back and forth on the road, building sort of the social environment around cars. And so, because of my study in performance art and relational aesthetics, I got really excited to go back to school and learn how to do paint and body for automotive. So, I went to Española Community College at the time and Northern New Mexico Community College and studied automotive science and auto body specifically which was like basically collision repair. But there, it was more like lowrider building and classic and custom car design. So, I studied there for three and a half years and. At that point in my life, I was like "I'm going to get my degree in automotive science and then I'm going to run this program," because I saw how much the program offered to the valley. There's a lot of issues in my town-- that's a long story. But I felt like relational aesthetics and the car culture that the town provided really had-- it was like "We have the healthy option. We have what we need within our culture to heal us already." I wanted to, more from a philosophical perspective, to run that program and make it something really incredible for the youth of the Valley. So, that's kind of why I did that, but also, to gain the skill set and knowledge to do classic car customization, basically.
Jo Reed: As you did with your piece, “Maria”, which is an homage to the great Pueblo potter, Maria Martinez, using a black-on-black design on an El Camino. Talk about that car. It's an extraordinary thing to see.
Rose B. Simpson: Yeah, “Maria” happened because of that program. The first day of class, they don't care your degrees or where you came from or your story. They just want to know what car you're bringing to work on. So, I bought this '85 El Camino –it was really ugly--and started driving it to school because it drove and I would work on it and work on it and work on it, this idea that the more I fixed it up, the more I could get out of the body and then it started growing on me. My mom has a non-profit organization called Flowering Tree Permaculture Institute, where she grows out our indigenous seeds and teach classes on sustainability and cultural preservation and so, she has different places where she grows out our indigenous seed and the end of one summer, we had harvest and my brother's kids were young, like five, six, seven years old, and we needed to go into the field and harvest. She had beans, chili, melons, squash and we would have gone out there with baskets and wheelbarrows. My mom said "Let's take that ugly thing." And we parked it out by the field and the little kids could reach over the side of the bed and fill it with all the abundant harvest and as we drove the El Camino back out of the field and into the front to unload it, where we were going to process all that, I realized she was this vessel. And she was a part of the community and she was providing assistance in this really beautiful way. And the edges and curves of her bed were very much like a pot and that was when it really hit me. I knew that a car was a vessel and that there were layers to this and in that moment, I was like "Wow, she is really someone.” I decided to paint her as a pot and turn her into pottery. At the time, I was doing a residency at the Denver Art Museum and I was setting up to do a performance, which I started calling “Transformance” because of how the intentionality of the moment transforms not only the participant, but also the viewer and so, I decided to get this car, quote-unquote, "done" to participate in this in this parade that I was putting together for the Denver Art Museum that would be about sort of taking up space and deconstructing gender roles and empowerment. So, I got her running well and finished the paint job and I put a bunch of subwoofers back behind the seats and then I blasted a heartbeat through it because when I was a teenager, I bought my first car when I was 12 and the first thing I did was put in 12-inch subwoofers because that was the late 90s and that's what you needed in your car was to totally blow your eardrums and everyone else's. So, that was kind of a natural thing to have this bass through this car and that was the first engine. She has a new engine since then.
Jo Reed: You’ve mentioned Maria was included in a performance piece. I’m curious how performance art may be different for you than your sculptures.
Rose B. Simpson: You know, it's terrifying to perform. It's terrifying to put yourself out there in the world. It's one thing to make a piece of art that is an object in a sense and you talk to it and you say "Go out into the world and do the work that you're supposed to do and I have faith in you and I trust you." But they're the ones going out there and doing it. It's another thing when it's your own body and it's your own being and it's active and there's the fears of messing up or doing something wrong or being seen in a way that I don't think we're generally aware or conscious of. So, I think that the act of performance or transformance has really imbued my intentionality and taught me a lot about who I am and where I'm going and where I'm coming from. Because I've done quite a few transformances since then and they've transformed.(laughs)
Jo Reed: I do want to talk about your current show at the Cleveland Museum of Art called “Strata” and that brings together clay and metal and concrete in monumental figures and it's positioned in an expansive, light-filled atrium. So, there are a couple of questions I have and the first is how do you see the figures interacting with the architectural space of the atrium?
Rose B. Simpson: Again, I waited until I was in situ to ask the place what needed to be made or said and "How can I help?" One of the things that I was aware of was that atrium is profound. It sort of stretches between sort of an older architectural style, which was the original museum and then the modern, more newer wing or building that's to the front of the museum. I guess it used to be an open space, but they managed to stretch this incredible glass ceiling over both buildings. The shadows that it left on the ground and the way that a museum can sometimes take you out of the present in ways because there's no natural light. There's no sort of awareness of time. But the atrium brings you back into a consciousness of the weather, of the time of day, of our relationship to the natural world and where we are on this planet, right? So, I also considered the scale of that building in that space and I realized that I needed to do something incredibly monumental. I think at the time when I saw there was these Ai Weiwei pieces that were in the atrium. I measured them and they were 14 feet tall and they look so tiny and I was like "Oh, no, I have to make something large." So, part of it was this idea of the shadow it casts and how a shadow, especially if it's made by the sun, is a sort of a timepiece and a reflection of our influence and our experience as beings in this world and in my journey to remind us all that the inanimate is listening or what we have deemed the inanimate has consciousness, this is yet another way that I can somehow try to relay that message through these two pieces and I've dealt with the duality of two pieces. I did, I think it was in 2015, Site Santa Fe had this 20th anniversary show and I made these two 11-foot-tall clay and steel figures and I set them in this 60-foot room alone. I was playing around with the tension between these two pieces. So, to walk between them as they stared at each other, it was almost visceral, the energy that they sort of created in the space between them.
Jo Reed: That leads me really nicely to this question because I'm curious how you see the viewer's role in completing the story or the energy of your work.
Rose B. Simpson: Recently, someone told me that my installation at the Whitney Biennial that had four larger-than-life clay figures facing each other-- so, they were at four corners and staring in-- that in a sense, the viewer was witnessing the work conscious of itself. I think that is super important to me because I make these hollow eyes, the eyes are hollow, the figures are hollow, they have these clay walls, they are vessels and there's something in there that's aware. There's something in there that we can remember has the potential of consciousness. And I feel like in this world where we have been so incredibly entitled and independent in a sense and we think we know best. And I often wonder if something that is personified, a piece of art that is a human, that is anthropomorphic, and it's watching, it has consciousness, it's watching and whether it's watching us or if it's in relationship or conversation with another one of its kind, that we can begin to recognize consciousness in that which we have deemed inanimate. And I feel like the viewer, if they spend enough time witnessing the witnessing that the piece is doing, that maybe they'll get the chills down their spine and they won't see the world the same.
Jo Reed: That's so well said. Your work challenges Western art hierarchies in many ways by embracing cultural techniques and ideas that have been passed down through the generations of your family. I'm just curious about some of the challenges you face in sort of maintaining that balance between a tradition, but a tradition that you want to expand, and innovation. It's a bit of a balancing act, I would think.
Rose B. Simpson: Absolutely. Actually, this summer has been a really big contemplative moment for me. As someone who is an active participant in my community, there is a lot of responsibility in being a community member and a lot of accountability to the decisions you make in your life and I feel like I take a lot of risks being as innovative and outside of the box as I am as a Pueblo person who is still part of my community, a community that is incredibly conservative. There's lots of things that I can't say and mostly because it's not my place and because I know why, then I don't want to cross those boundaries. It's not my place to speak about. It's not my place to make work about. And because of that, it's forced me, I think, to almost be more innovative and more abstract in certain ways. How can I convey that which I'm trying to say without being disrespectful, without being extractive, and without taking any cultural shortcuts in my work that could represent my people in the wrong way? Because as an active community member, what I do reflects on my community and I make tons and tons of mistakes. But I'm also learning and having to choose constantly between what I feel needs to be said, what I feel is healthily conveyed, and how I can be in my integrity in what I'm doing and check myself constantly if I am letting any kind of mind trip or entitlement that is outside of the integrity of my values and the values of my community slip into my practice. It's a really, really sensitive and tenuous experience to navigate this kind of thing. I will always make mistakes. But that I make the least amount of mistakes because the most important thing is that I love these people and I love this place and I need to be a good team player for the future of our people. And I know that there are people in my community that are invested and dedicated to cultural preservation and then there's someone like me who spends my life trying to figure out how healing can happen in a larger way, that if we can make this healing happen outside and inside our community, what does that look like? How can that happen? How do we question why people hurt each other and why we would continue hurting each other? Why do I drive a car and use fossil fuels? Why do plants and animals give their life every day to sustain my body, to make these choices I'm making and how am I being accountable to that equation and how can I be conscious of that equation and make the most informed and conscious decisions so that I am a better community member to this planet? It's based on my experience of being a community member in a small place like a Pueblo. But because of that experience, I can see how we're all community members of this planet, of these towns, of these cities. We all have communities and how do we be conscious and careful and not be sloppy in our decisions as we move forward? And then have compassion for those moments where we are complicated and that process isn't always exactly what you wanted it to look like. Because if we can't love ourselves, we can't have any compassion or love for anything else and I think that's one of the hardest things.
Jo Reed: I think that is a good place to end it, Rose. Thank you so much.
Rose B. Simpson: Thank you.
Jo Reed: That was Rose B. Simpson, an artist from Santa Clara Pueblo. You can keep up with her and see images of her work including Maria at rosebsimpson.com. You can find images of her installation Seed at the website for Madison Square Park Conservancy and her current exhibit Strata, at the Cleveland Museum of Art’s website. We’ll have links to them all in our show notes. You’ve been listening to Art Works, produced at the National Endowment for the Arts. If you like the pod, then follow us and leave us a rating. I’m Josephine Reed. Thanks for listening.
We mark Native American Heritage Month with artist Rose B. Simpson (Santa Clara Pueblo), who discusses her work in large-scale public art and her journey as a creative rooted in Santa Clara Pueblo heritage. Simpson reflects on her process; exploring themes of protection; generational healing; and the deep connection between her art, identity, and community. Simpson explains how her background in Santa Clara Pueblo pottery and her experiences studying in Japan and at the Rhode Island School of Design ( RISD) have shaped her unique approach, blending cultural reverence with innovative techniques. We talk in-depth about her recent installation Seed, commissioned by the Madison Square Park Conservancy to mark its 20th anniversary (and funded in part by the NEA), a work inspired by both the Lenape land and Simpson’s own explorations of safety and lineage; and her monumental exhibit Strata, currently showing at the Cleveland Museum of Art.
Simpson also discusses her automotive training and its impact on her art, particularly her work Maria一the black-on-black El Camino, symbolizing the Pueblo tradition of pottery within lowrider culture. Simpson shares the challenges of creating art that respects cultural boundaries while pushing expressive boundaries, capturing the spirit of resilience and interconnectedness that defines her work.