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Sky Hopinka: The Myth Is Now, on view from January 30 to August 2, 2026 at the Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland, presents a lyrical and deeply reflective body of work that weaves together film, photography, and text. Through experimental and documentary approaches, Hopinka centers Indigenous ways of knowing, creating spaces where language, memory, and ancestral knowledge are not only preserved, but actively reimagined in the present.
Rather than offering fixed narratives, the exhibition unfolds as a constellation of stories shaped by place and movement. Across three interconnected projects, Hopinka explores how belonging is formed through geography, oral tradition, and lived experience. His work resists linear history, instead embracing myth as something fluid—alive within landscapes, voices, and personal recollection. In doing so, he challenges viewers to consider how identity is carried forward through storytelling that adapts rather than disappears.
In
Unforgiven Souls Sing Hymns, photographs quietly examine faith, endurance, and cultural survival, translating oral traditions into visual encounters that feel intimate and ongoing.
Situated at the East End of Devils Lake expands language into physical space, where words stretch across the gallery wall in the shape of a flying goose, transforming text into topography. The video work
He Who Wears Faces on His Ears draws from Ho-Chunk cosmology, reflecting on the figure of Red Horn as a presence that moves between worlds, embodying both transformation and continuity.
Throughout the exhibition, Hopinka engages the idea of the “arrière-pays,” the distant and unreachable homeland, as a metaphor for spiritual searching. His works gesture toward places that exist between languages, between memory and imagination. These are spaces where the past and present speak to one another, where ancestral echoes remain embedded in contemporary life.
The Myth Is Now ultimately invites viewers into a shared act of listening—one that honors stories not as artifacts of history, but as living forces shaping the world we inhabit today.
Image:
Sky Hopinka, Hihižąkicųšgųnįeja, 2024. Unique inkjet with hand-scratched text and UV treatment, 52 1/4 x 124 3/4 inches. Courtesy of Broadway Gallery, LLC. © Sky Hopinka