Indigenous Methodologies: A Collaborative Painting with Maya Painter Paula Nicho Cúmez

  • Kryssi Staikidis Northern Illinois University

Abstract

The twofold purpose of the present essay and video is to extend and refine my indigenous research methodology based on the work of Smith (2012) and Eldridge (2008), first, by offering new ways to conceptualize the presentation of relational experience in collaborative ethnographic work in academia, and second, by examining what it means for art educators to work with communities over an extended period of time. In this essay and video, I include myself as a participant and mentored student, an intrinsic part of the research process, not something separate. The research process and the mentoring model are intrinsically intertwined, so viewer access to the teaching relationship in the video illuminates the research process. I present this ethnography in art education from the anthropological perspective of lifelong practice that examines subtle differences in art teaching practice and evolving changes in research methodology over time. This video and essay, the third in a series of reflective Visual Culture & Gender (VCG) journal articles about decolonizing and indigenous research methodologies, demonstrates important changes for me that can inform art education about the value of long-term research. My main finding in this essay and video is that the explicit revelation of the relationship between the two participants, Paula Nicho Cúmez and me, is of paramount importance in the representation of such research. Only when the self-aware researcher presents herself in collaboration and revisits the video-documented collaboration can she discover multilevel opportunities for deep reflection about differing definitions of artistic processes, the generation of ideas, and the nuanced dynamics of mentor-based instruction as a research model.

Author Biography

Kryssi Staikidis, Northern Illinois University

Kryssi Staikidis is an Associate Professor of Art Education and the supervisor of the Masters Program in Art + Design Education at Northern Illinois University. She holds a Doctor of Education Degree in Art and Art Education and a Bachelor of Science degree in Anthropology and Art History from Teachers College Columbia University in New York City. Her research interests are indigenous research and pedagogy in the classroom. She has published in Studies in Art Education, The Journal of Art Education, Visual Arts Research, Visual Culture & Gender, The Journal of Social Theory in Art Education, and The Jounral of Qualitative Inquiry and multiple book chapters in art education and general education anthologies. Dr. Staikidis is past editor for The Journal of Social Theory in Art Education. She is co-editor for an National Art Education Association anthology entitled, Transforming Our Practices: Indigenous Art, Pedagogies, and Philosophies. Correspondence should be addressed to kstaikidis@niu.edu.

Published
2014-10-01
How to Cite
STAIKIDIS, Kryssi. Indigenous Methodologies: A Collaborative Painting with Maya Painter Paula Nicho Cúmez. Visual Culture & Gender, [S.l.], v. 9, p. 91-112, oct. 2014. ISSN 1936-1912. Available at: <http://vcg.emitto.net/index.php/vcg/article/view/87>. Date accessed: 26 apr. 2024.
Section
Articles