Rose Powhatan


Rose Powhatan is an American mixed-media artist, author, storyteller, and activist. Rose Powhatan is an inaugural member of the Culture Caucus at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. The Cultural Caucus was founded at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, DC. Rose Powhatan is currently a member of the Kennedy Center’s Community Advisory Board.
She is a Cafritz Foundation and Fulbright Scholar member. Powhatan attended Howard University, Georgetown University, Catholic University, and the University of London.

Background and family

Powhatan is from Washington, D.C. Her mother is artists Georgia Mills Jessup. Rose Powhatan married Michael Auld, and their son is Kiros Auld.
She has stated, "I am an Indigenous female elder descended from the Pamunkey and the Tauxenent tribes. Gary Gray, former chief of the Pamunkey Indian Tribe states that their chief in the 1980s "handed out 'paper cards' to Auld's mother and grandmother" and, "We spent several years using exact criteria, and they didn't meet it. Kiros's family know they are not enrolled citizens of the tribe.'"
Her extended family includes 29 art practitioners.

Education

Powhatan attended Howard University in Washington D.C., where she studied studio arts, art history, and education. She completed her graduate studies at the University of London.

Museum

Powhatan and her husband, Michael Auld, cofounded the Powhatan Museum, in Washington, DC, 2000. Their website and collection provide information on the first European encounters in the Americas; the Powhatan Confederacy of the Virginia Territory and the Indigenous Peoples of the Caribbean, the Taino and Kalinago. The Powhatan Museum should not be confused with the Pamunkey [Indian Museum and Cultural Center], a tribal museum in King William, Virginia.

Artworks

Powhatan's artwork calls for respect for Indigenous cultures. She researches traditional Eastern Woodlands Indigenous designs for her artwork.
"Soweto/So-We-Too" is a silk-screen print that expresses the connection of Native and other oppressed people. Palestinians, Native Americans, and South Africans are represented by cultural symbols that are related to traditional housing. The colors in the print symbolize the four sacred Native American colors, directions, and races of humanity.
"Fire Woman Warrior" is a sculpture of Keziah Powhatan.
"Pocahontas Unmasked" is a print of a distant maternal cousin. This print is Powhatan's interpretation of an unmasked English version of Pocahontas. It is based on John White's watercolors based on the Amerindian phenotype from 1585.

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions

  • "Age-Old Tribe's Dream Painter," Fondo Del Sol, Washington D.C, December 19, 1990-January 26, 1991.
  • "Culture Caucus Summer Festival: Rose Powhatan," The Reach at The Kennedy Center, Washington, D.C., September 2-3, 2022.
  • "Wingapo! Welcome to the Native American Dance Circle," The Kennedy Center, Washington D.C., July 8-July 10, 2021.

    Group exhibitions

  • "Totems to Powhatan," Vienna, Virginia, metro station, 1988.
  • "'SUBMULOC': REVERSING THE TIDE," Fondo Del Sol, Washington, D.C., June 26, 1992-July 11, 1992.
  • "The Land Carries Our Ancestors: Contemporary Art by Native Americans," National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C., October 4, 2023-January 15, 2024.
  • Visual Power: 21st Century Native American Artists/Intellectuals, 2005, traveling exhibition, curated by Phoebe Farris

    Film

Powhatan appeared as an extra in the 2005 historical film The New World.
She also appeared in the 2008 HBO series “John Adams”. Powhatan acted in the role of Nancy Attucks, the Nattick Indian mother of Crispus Attucks, who was a hero of the American Revolutionary War.
Visitors to the Jamestown Settlement Park in Virginia can see Powhatan acting in the role of a 17th century Pamunkey elder in the film “1607: A Nation Takes Root”.
Rose Powhatan is also featured as a storyteller of Virginia Indian and other Indigenous American cultural origins on YouTube.

Publications

Books

  • The Things I Prefer to Be Forgotten
  • Tonto Canto Pocahontas
“The People Who Stayed:
Southeastern Indian Writing After Removal”.
Rose Powhatan contributed her memoir titled “Surviving Document Genocide” as the entree to the publication.

Articles

  • My American Liberty Story: Rose A. Powhatan
  • ''Opinion | D.C. Once Had an Indigenous Queen, Cockacoeske, the Queen of Pamunkey. Remember Her Story.''