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Give it Back: Stage Theory

New Red Order

2023 00:06:38 United StatesEnglishB&W and ColorStereo16:9HD video

Description

Give it Back: Stage Theory’s point of departure is the détournement of Panorama of the Monumental Grandeur of the Mississippi Valley (1850), a 9 foot tall, 348 foot long proto-cinematic moving panorama commissioned by and based on the contemporaneous notes and drawings of 19th century amateur archaeologist and glorified grave robber Montroville W. Dickeson — who spent 12 years of his life traveling the Mississippi River and digging up Indigenous burial mounds. The panorama, originally presented at The Centennial Exhibition in Philadelphia in 1876, toured from town to town, accompanied by music, dramatic light effects, and a sensational narration by Dickeson himself. Give it Back: Stage Theory re-presents the panorama with new narration and music, transforming it into a ‘Land Back’ rave urgently advocating for the rematriation of all Indigenous land and life. 

About New Red Order

New Red Order is a public secret society facilitated by core contributors Adam Khalil, Zack Khalil, and Jackson Polys. In our current period of existential and environmental catastrophe, desires for Indigenous epistemologies increase and enterprising settlers labor to extract this understanding as if it were a natural resource. New Red Order—emerging out of contradistinction from the Improved Order of Red Men, a secret society that 'plays Indian'—calls attraction toward indigeneity into question, yet promotes this desire, and enjoins potential non-Indigenous accomplices to participate in the co-examination and expansion of Indigenous agency. Working with an interdisciplinary network of informants the NRO co-produces video, performance, and installation works that confront settler colonial tendencies and obstacles to Indigenous growth. They have presented their work at Artists Space, Haus der Kulturen der Welt Berlin, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Kunstverein in Hamburg, Lincoln Center, Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, New York Film Festival, Sundance Film Festival, Toronto Biennial 2019, Walker Art Center, and Whitney Biennial 2019, among others, expanding the public secret society network across numerous institutional platforms. 

See also The Violence of a Civilization Without Secrets, an early work by Adam Khalil, Zack Khalil, and Jackson Polys created before the formation of New Red Order.