Da-ka-xeen Mehner
Da-ka-xeen Mehner is a Tlingit/Nisga'a American visual artist whose work includes photography and multimedia installations that incorporate video, sculpture and sound.
Early life and education
Mehner was born in Fairbanks, Alaska to an American father and a Tlingit/Nisga'a mother. He was raised in two cultures; by his mother in Anchorage as an "urban Native" and in Fairbanks as a "rural hippie". His extended family includes several artists, and he was particularly influenced by the photographer Larry McNeil, who is his uncle. In 1990, he left Alaska and moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico to pursue an education at the Institute of American Indian Arts where he received an AA degree in 1992. He received a BFA from the University of New Mexico in 2003, and an MFA from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks in 2007. His student work explored themes that included the environment, death and destruction.Work
Mehner works in photography and installations that combine video, sculpture and sound. His work examines Native American identity and explorations of the self as a cross-cultural person.He has had solo exhibitions at the State Museum of Alaska, the Museum of the Institute of American Indian Arts, the Anchorage Museum among other venues.
He is currently Professor of Native Art at the University of Alaska, Fairbanks, where he is the director of the Native Arts Center.