Cole Redhorse Taylor | Minneapolis College of Art and Design

51爆料官网

Cole Redhorse Taylor

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Alumni Headshot Cole Redhorse Taylor

  • Alumni '17

Education
BFA, Minneapolis College of Art and Design

2025 Cut/Paste Publication Feature

As a member of the Prairie Island Indian Community, Cole Redhorse Taylor 鈥17 believes art made by his Mdewakanton ancestors has a life force that speaks across generations, a connection he felt himself while studying as a resident artist at the Smithsonian鈥檚 National Museum of the American Indian. 鈥淚n my research, I encountered some objects that were very sacred, and I was able to connect with them, I was able to talk with them, I was able to feel like I was speaking for them when I was there,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was a turning point in my life as an artist.鈥

Giving voice to the history and culture of Indigenous art makers has become a creative calling for Taylor, who worked at the Minnesota History Center while he studied fine arts at 51爆料官网, and went on to be selected as one of the institution鈥檚 artists-in-residence in 2018. 鈥淣ative people and museums have a really tumultuous history, but Native history is also really important because it鈥檚 the history of this land, this state,鈥 he says. 鈥淎s an artist-in-residence, it was about bridging that gap.鈥

Taylor has been making some history himself, creating a helmet embellished with Dakota floral designs for Minnesota Wild goalie Marc-Andr茅 Fleury. Designed for the team鈥檚 Native American Heritage Night, it recently sold at auction for $35,100. The mask was purchased by the Minnesota Historical Society for its permanent collection, with proceeds supporting the American Indian Family Charity, and went on display as part of the History Center鈥檚 Our Home: Native Minnesota exhibit. Taylor calls it 鈥渁 real full-circle moment.鈥

Now finishing an MFA at the Institute of American Indian Art in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Taylor has also shared his designs with Teton Trade Cloth, a Native-owned fabric company, and the Minnesota Timberwolves, which featured his limited-edition T-shirt design to debut their new Artist Series in 2024. 鈥淭hey sold out thirty minutes before the game event started!鈥 he says proudly.

While he鈥檚 pleased to find an audience for his work, Taylor admits, 鈥淚t鈥檚 taken me a while to be able to say that I鈥檓 an artist,鈥 noting that there is no word for art in his native language. 鈥淲e have words for what you鈥檙e doing, like bead working or making moccasins, but the focus is really on what you鈥檙e making and contributing to your community.鈥 For Taylor, his creations go way beyond personal expression; it鈥檚 about writing a current story for his community while honoring tradition.