Smithsonian American Art Museum reposted this
With their eye-catching orange and black wings, monarch butterflies travel thousands of miles to winter homes. Indigenous peoples’ connections to the butterfly have existed for millennia. This artwork, "Monarch Nation," in the collection of our Smithsonian American Art Museum was created by Kevin and Valerie Pourier, Oglala Lakota husband-and-wife artists from the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota. They depicted monarch migration on a buffalo horn, a material with a deep ancestral and cultural connection—the name of the Lakota “Pte Oyate” translates as “buffalo people. Learn more: https://s.si.edu/41v6tJy The Purépecha people of northwestern Michoacán in Mexico called the butterfly “parákata,” or “the harvester,” because the arrival of its overwintering population coincided with the community’s annual harvest. Learn more from our National Museum of the American Indian: https://bit.ly/4gw9UUH Monarch butterflies are increasingly threatened but there are ways you can help by planting native milkweeds and nectar-producing plants in your backyard or balcony. Kevin Pourier, Valerie Pourier, "Monarch Nation," 2019, carved bison horn, inlaid orange sandstone, white mother of pearl