SELECTED EXHIBITIONS > Frist Museum- In Her Place

I was honored to have a solo presentation in the group exhibition, In Her Place, at the Frist Art Museum, Feb 1-Apr 26, 2026. Photos curtesy John Schweikert

"Working across different media, including performance, sculpture, painting, and photography, Jana Harper explores how the burdens of history can be transformed through gestures of love and empathy. Much of her practice reflects on the Mackinac Bands of Chippewa and Ottawa Indians, of which she is a member. The works on view in this gallery are part of a long-term, multifaceted project rooted in historical research and the Mackinac Bands’ fifty year quest for federal recognition by the US government.

Song for the Water follows the Anishinaabe peoples’ main migration routes through the Great Lakes. Harper handstitched glass seed beads from her late mother’s collection onto the bottom of each silk panel. How Indian are You? is a visual representation of her maternal family tree, while Ancestor Bulletin is an archive of Harper’s research over the last ten years. Memorial for Mackinac features nearly two thousand names from a census taken between 1870 and 1908 of the four Michigan tribes that consider Mackinac sacred." -wall text

Song for the Water
photographs printed on silk and bathed in sacred water; cedar, copper, and glass seed beads
48" x 260"
2025
Song for the Water
detail of copper labels and cedar clips
2025
Song for the Water
detail of seed beads
2025
How Indian Are You? (Families of Lewis Bourisseau and Josephine Paquin)
white rice, wild rice, ball jars, hardware, latex
132”x 168” x 4”
2021
Memorial for Mackinac III
Installation view
2025
Memorial for Mackinac III
sumi ink and gouache on rag paper
100” x 73”
2025
Ancestor Bulletin 1-39
Risograph
75" x 136"
2025
Ancestor Bulletin 1-39
Risograph
75" x 136"
2025