Nathan Young
Artist Statement
Nathan Young (born 1975, Tahlequah, OK) is an artist and scholar working in an expanded practice that incorporates sound, video, documentary, animation, installation, socially engaged art, experimental music and art history. Nathan’s work often draws upon the spiritual and the political to complicate and subvert notions of the sublime. Nathan co-founded the artist collective Postcommodity and holds an MFA in Music/Sound from Bard College’s Milton-Avery School of the Arts. Young is a PhD Candidate in the University of Oklahoma’s innovative Native American Art History Doctoral program where his scholarship is focused on Indigenous Sonic Agency. Nathan’s work has been supported by Creative Capital, The Tulsa Artist Fellowship, The George Kaiser Family Foundation, The Pew Foundation, and the Carnegie Mellon Foundation as well as the Tribeca Film Institute and the Sundance Institute. Young is an enrolled member of the Delaware Tribe of Indians and is also a direct descendent of the Pawnee Nation and Kiowa Tribe. Young formerly served as an elected member of the Delaware Tribe of Indians Tribal Council.
- December 2023
Biography
Nathan Young’s multi-media practice is anchored in sound. An artist, composer, and scholar, his work takes a collaborative and community-oriented approach to place making while working across sound, video, animation, and experimental music, among other genres. Focusing on the convergence of spiritual and political realms, Young aims to inspire inquiry into forgotten, marginalized, or obscured histories. He remains open to a variety of artistic mediums to best articulate his work and intentions.
Young’s installation, nkwiluntàmën, meaning “I long for it; I am lonesome for it (such as the sound of a drum),” 2023, premiered at Pennsbury Manor, a historical site and the country home of writer and religious thinker William Penn in Morrisville, PA. The immersive installation explored the historical legacy of the removal of the Delaware Tribe (Lenape) from the area, filling the site with the work of various composers and his own collaborative compositions, together with abstract visualizations of the Lenape language. Notably, Young’s project was the first time a historical organization has collaborated with a Delaware/Lenape artist to begin a conversation surrounding this subject matter.
Other works include: Cowboy (2023), Denver Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver, CO; Shine On - We Haunt You (Ear/Wave/Event Journal, 2021); Sonic Agency (Canadian Art Magazine, 2021); Activation/Transformation I (2021), The Wheelwright Museum of American Indian Art, Sante Fe, NM; Welcome to Lenapehoking (2018), Performance Space, New York, NY; and Night Music of the Southern Plains American Indian (2018), Kansas City Art Institute Crossroads Gallery: Center for Contemporary Practice, Kansas City, MO.
Young has received the Pew Arts and Culture Foundation Project Award (2022), the Mellon Pre-Doctoral Fellowship (2021-2022), and the Tulsa Artist Fellowship (2016-2021).