Living Land Acknowledgement Statement

PAFA is moving to craft an official territorial acknowledgement for the institution.

Follow this process below

Our Commitment to Reconciliation and Healing

The Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) is located in Lenapehoking, the unceded homeland of the Lenape Peoples. Due to ongoing colonization and land swindles like the Walking Purchase of 1737, in which Pennsylvania authorities forcibly removed Lenape Peoples from this land, many Lenape communities currently live in diaspora outside of their homeland. 

These Lenape nations include the Delaware Nation in Anadarko, Oklahoma; the Delaware Tribe of Indians in Bartlesville, Oklahoma; the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohican Indians in Wisconsin; the Munsee-Delaware Nation in Ontario; the Delaware Nation at Moraviantown in Ontario; and the Delaware of Six Nations in Ontario. Lenape and other Indigenous Peoples, languages, and cultures continue to thrive in Lenapehoking and beyond.

American art institutions have long benefitted from and participated in settler colonialism. It is crucial that we work to address these harmful legacies. As the oldest art museum and school in the US, PAFA takes this work seriously, and commits to pushing back against settler colonialism in:

  • How our archival and collection materials are understood, presented, discussed, and expanded; 

  • The policies and practices of our institution;

  • The administration and operation of our school;

  • How we design educational curricula and programming;

  • How we train and educate emerging artists; and

  • How we understand who is represented within and invited into the spaces we cultivate

PAFA is committed to tangibly and actively supporting Lenape and other Indigenous arts, cultures, sovereignty, and presence through our ever-developing exhibitions, residencies, programming, policies, and curricula. We invite everyone who engages with PAFA to honor these living communities and to work alongside us to foster ethically responsible futures for the American art world.

* This is a working statement and has not been approved by PAFA’s Board of Trustees

* As a living statement will continue to change over time as we continue to learn and build relationships.


“PAFA's first Land Acknowledgement Statement has to honor the presence of Indigenous communities, recognize the importance of ongoing relationship-building with Indigenous communities, affirm PAFA’s commitment to reconciliation and healing, and actively support Lenape initiatives and aspirations.”

- Dr. Ronke Oke, Director of DEIB and Title IX Coordinator


Our Progress +

Our Progress +

When we were asked to craft an official territorial acknowledgement for the institution, we asked ourselves several tough, but important grounding questions:

  • Who owns this land?

  • How did this institution come to be here?

  • How has this institution participated, to this day, in colonization and settler colonialism, and in the ongoing erasure and dispossession of Indigenous peoples from these lands?

  • How can this institution do better?

Timeline

2019. PAFA begins its DEIB transformation

2020. PAFA’s Board of Trustees approves the Belonging Report, an action plan to inform and improve diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) support, policies, and practices at PAFA, and to advance PAFA’s core values as a community.

2019. PAFA’s Chief Operating Officer, Dr. Lisa Biagas, introduces a policy to replace Columbus Day with Indigenous Peoples Day. This measure does not receive enough support from the PAFA community to move forward.

2022. In October 2022, PAFA held a one-hour online introductory workshop led by IPD Philly (Indigenous Peoples’ Day Philly Inc). This workshop provided participants the opportunity to learn about Indigenous histories, presence, and issues in Philadelphia and the US, and to begin developing concrete plans of action that will help support PAFA’s efforts to confront and challenge settler-colonial legacies.

2020. PAFA hires its inaugural Director of Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging and Deputy Title IX Coordinator, Dr. Ronke Oke.

2022. PAFA officially observes Indigenous Peoples Day as an institutional holiday. Dr. Lisa Biagas charges Drs. Ronke Oke and Ashley Caranto Morford to craft an institutional Land Acknowledgment Statement.

2023. In May 2023, PAFA held a Living Land Acknowledgement workshop facilitated by Curtis Zunigha from The Lenape Center. This workshop was the first step to ensure that PAFA’s territorial acknowledgement is done responsibly, accountably, and in reciprocal relationship with the community whose land PAFA occupies.

2023. After receiving consent from Lenape leaders, Drs. Ronke Oke and Ashley Caranto Morford begin crafting the first draft of PAFA’s Land Acknowledgment Statement.

2023. In July 2023, Drs. Ronke Oke and Ashley Caranto Morford incorporate stakeholder feedback into the working draft of PAFA’s Land Acknowledgment Statement.

2023. In August 2023, Drs. Ronke Oke and Ashley Caranto Morford finalized PAFA’s Living Land Acknowledgement (a working draft).

2023. We continue to welcome feedback from Lenape leaders and community members. This statement remains open to change, as it is a living part of our institution. We will add to the timeline as we continue to learn and build relationships.

2022-2023. Following the IPD, Philly Workshop, and based on Mia Mingus’ idea of accountability pods, Dr. Ashley Caranto Morford led a group of PAFA staff and faculty in a monthly meeting to develop, share, and strategize how PAFA can be responsible to Indigenous studies in a holistic way.

2022. Drs. Ronke Oke and Ashley Caranto Morford meet with Dr. Anna Marley (Chief of Curatorial Affairs) and Clint Jukkala (Executive Dean of the College) to gain more institutional support for a Living Land Acknowledgement Statement Workshop.

2023. In May 2023, Drs. Ronke Oke and Ashley Caranto Morford met with Lenape leaders to discuss the process of creating a meaningful and action-based territorial acknowledgement together, as a first step in beginning to build an ongoing relationship between the Lenape nation and the PAFA community. 

2023. In April 2023, the first draft of PAFA’s Living Land Acknowledgment Statement is circulated to the OISE team, POD members, and participants from The Living Land Acknowledgment Workshop for feedback.

2023. Drs. Ronke Oke and Ashley Caranto Morford sent the Working Draft of PAFA’s Land Acknowledgement Statement to Lenape leaders and Curtis Zunigha for feedback.

2023. In September 2023, Drs. Ronke Oke and Ashley Caranto Morford launched this page on the OISE website so that the PAFA community and external stakeholders can track our development progress to date.


History of Lenape Land Dispossession

Settler colonialism cannot be reduced nor confined to a historical event (Wolfe, 1991). Rather, it is an ongoing structure and process — interlocked with other systems of oppression, including imperialism and capitalism — that is always transforming and unfolding (Wolfe, 1991). This timeline offers some key moments in the long and violent process of colonial states, governments, and settlers forcing Lenape Peoples from their homeland.

Since time immemorial: Lenapehoking — the lands and waters that New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware are currently on — has always been the territories of the Lenape Peoples.

Resources

 FAQs

This was a collective effort.

We would like to thank Lenape leaders from the Delaware Tribe of Indians, Delaware Nation at Moraviantown, and Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohicans for giving their consent to PAFA to draft our territorial acknowledgement statement.

We would also like to thank Curtis Zunigha from The Lenape Center for his partnership and generosity throughout this process.

We thank our PAFA community for their support and dedication to this vital project.

PAFA’s territorial acknowledgment remains a living document — a long-lasting and ongoing commitment to do better and work in ethical and reciprocal relationship with the living Lenape communities whose land PAFA occupies.