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Gallery 64
Item 10 of 53
This is a contributing entry for Gallery 64 and only appears as part of that tour.Learn More.
A Good Place to Grow Corn, Barrie Kaufman, 2011. This work depicts a Native American woman in traditional attire. She stands in front of a small river or stream, possibly representing the Kanawha River. Behind the figure sprout copious corn stalks. The Kanawha River valley was heavily populated by Native American peoples due to the ease of agriculture. Corn was a staple of Native American diets and their primary agricultural crop. Through its depiction of Native American life, A Good Place to Grow Corn honors Charleston’s pre-European history.

A Good Place to Grow Corn.

Plant, Wheel, Tire, Paint

Dilger, Robert Jay. Kanawha County History, WVU Political Science. February 1st 2002. Accessed February 5th 2021. http://www.polsci.wvu.edu/wv/Kanawha/kanhistory.html.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

Office of Public Art, Charleston WV. Accessed February 8, 2021. https://gisweb.cityofcharleston.org/storymaps/arttour/#.