Now Exhibitions

Maria Hupfield: The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan)

View of a bright gallery space with three neon-yellow platforms displaying felt objects. Two photographs and a piece of gray felt hang on the right wall.

Enter a dynamic sculpture that engages with living people, architectural space, ideas, and materials.

In February 2025, the Wexner Center for the Arts presents an exhibition dedicated to the work of Toronto-based artist Maria Hupfield, an active member of the Anishinaabek Nation from Wasauksing First Nation (Robinson Huron Treaty), Ontario. Developing from her commission for the 2024 Toronto Biennial of Art, The Supernatural Powers of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan), she creates for the Wex an environment that focuses on the possibilities of sculptural materials, exploring how live performances resonate with multiple versions of the present.
 
Maria Hupfield’s immersive installations move through sculpture, performance, and video to challenge assumptions that spiral around objects. Her exhibitions are experimental sites where perceptions are tested, shared, and questioned. For Hupfield, artworks are always commas and never full stops: they are never fixed and always in conversation with the time and place that surround them.
 
The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan) is a living sculpture, engaging with living peoples, site, space, ideas, and materials. It is crafted from industrial felt adorned with silver jingle bells and tin cone jingles. Felt is a primary material for Hupfield. Through use, she exposes its tactile and sound-dampening qualities, unraveling its material associations with the Western art-historical canon, returning to its practical utility. The exhibition will also include new performances and documentation of past performances.
 
The gallery spaces will become a sensory exploration of water and place. Whirlpools (biimskojiwan in the Anishinaabe language) anticipate the appearance of Fabulous Panther (miszhibizhiw)—in Anishinaabe oral traditions (aadizookaang) the most powerful underwater being known. In a challenge to colonial conventions for displaying art, Hupfield’s powerful work creates as a site for active bodies that hold, support, and cushion art with generous care.

"At this critical juncture, Maria Hupfield’s work is a much needed disruption, to hold institutions accountable and in doing so help them stay relevant."

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View of a bright gallery space with three neon-yellow platforms displaying felt objects. Two photographs and 1 piece of gray felt hang on the right wall.

Maria Hupfield: The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan). Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts, 2025.

View of a long triangular pedestal displaying four gray felt objects. The pedestal’s top and a diagonal line pattern the side are pained neon yellow.

Maria Hupfield: The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan). Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts, 2025.

Overhead view of a rectangular pedestal painted with neon-yellow stripes. Three objects of various materials rest on top. Gray marley and wood flooring are visible.

Maria Hupfield: The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan). Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts, 2025. 

A close-up of a spiral object made of gray felt adorned with tin jingles. It rests on a neon-yellow dolly sitting on a neon-yellow background.

Maria Hupfield, Supernatural Powers of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan), 2024 (detail). Industrial felt, bells, tin jingles, cotton fabric, and polyester thread, dimensions variable. Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts, 2025. Courtesy of the artist, Galerie Hugues Charbonneau, Montreal, and Patel Brown, Toronto.

A dark space with four Zoom meeting screens projected on the wall. The participants, engaged in a performance, have unique poses and expressions.

Maria Hupfield with T.J. Dedeaux-Norris, Ayana Evans, and Esther Neff, 4 Bodies 1 Screen, 2020. Zoom video performance; 76:38 mins. A performance as part of the Performance-in-Place Zoom series, July 21, 2020. Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts, 2025. Courtesy of the Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation and The 8th Floor. Collection of the artist.
 

The entrance to a bright gallery space. There is a large rectangular portal painted with a pattern of neon-green stripes at the entrance.

Maria Hupfield: The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan). Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts, 2025. 

A large rectangular photograph on a white wall. Two figures are obscured by an arc of gray felt integrated into the photograph.

Maria Hupfield, Truth Comes In Its Own Time II, 2018. C-print and industrial felt, 40 x 30 in. Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts, 2025. Collection of Torys LLP.

View of a bright gallery space with three photographs and one large rectangular piece of gray felt hanging on the wall.

Maria Hupfield: The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan). Installation view at the Wexner Center for the Arts, 2025. 

Maria Hupfield supports a long gray felt scroll with silver bells attached along one edge. It drapes over her left shoulder and right forearm.

Maria Hupfield activating her work Jingle Scroll

Maria Hupfield, dressed in black, performs wearing a long, gray felt scroll with silver bells attached along one edge.

Maria Hupfield activating her work Jingle Scroll. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: LF Documentation.  

About the artist

Maria Hupfield

Maria Hupfield merges performance art, design, and sculpture, drawing from Indigenous storytelling traditions through art, scholarship, collaboration, and social justice.
 
Hupfield was the inaugural ArtworxTO Legacy Artist in Residence with the City of Toronto and a recipient of the Hnatyshyn Mid-Career Award for Outstanding Achievement and the Toronto Friends of the Visual Arts Artist Prize, among others. Her work has been exhibited, performed, and collected across North America. She is co-owner of Native Art Department International with her husband, artist Jason Lujan.
 
Hupfield is Martin clan and an off-reservation member of the Anishinaabe Nation belonging to Wasauksing First Nation, Ontario. Since 2019, she is a Canada research chair in transdisciplinary Indigenous art and an assistant professor of Indigenous digital arts and performance in the Department of Visual Studies and the Department of English & Drama at the University of Toronto Mississauga.

Program Support

THIS PRESENTATION IS MADE POSSIBLE BY
Ohio State Energy Partners

EXHIBITIONS 2024–25 SEASON MADE POSSIBLE BY  
Bill and Sheila Lambert  
Crane Family Foundation  

FREE GALLERIES MADE POSSIBLE BY  
Adam Flatto
PNC Foundation

WEXNER CENTER PROGRAMS MADE POSSIBLE BY  
Greater Columbus Arts Council

The Wexner Family 
Institute of Museum and Library Services

Mellon Foundation
Every Page Foundation
Ohio Arts Council, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts 
CampusParc

Nationwide Foundation

Lois S. and H. Roy Chope Fund of The Columbus Foundation
The Columbus Foundation 
Axium Packaging

ADDITIONAL SUPPORT PROVIDED BY
Ohio History Fund/Ohio History Connection  
David Crane and Elizabeth Dang

Louise Lambert Braver

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Now Exhibitions

Maria Hupfield: The Endless Return of Fabulous Panther (Biimskojiwan)