View complete article and references at Commemorative Landscapes of North Carolina at: https://docsouth.unc.edu/commland/monument/179
Description: "The Gift," composed in a staggered pattern typical of beadwork but rendered in colored brick on a massive scale, depicts traditional southeastern Native American life symbols such as turtles, eagle feathers, ears of corn, mountains, and water. The artwork is roughly 240 feet long and 40 feet wide.
Dedication date: 4/20/2004
Creator: Senora Lynch, Artist, Unspecified
Materials & Techniques: Brick
Unveiling & Dedication: The monument and its creator were honored at 12:15 pm on April 20, 2004. Greg Richardson, executive director of the North Carolina Commission of Indian Affairs, spoke. Derek Oxendine, a UNC junior who was president of the student group Carolina Indian Circle, also spoke and burned sacred herbs.
Subject notes: The monument contains images of turtles, eagle feathers, ears of corn, mountains, and water. A plaque near the monument explains the symbolism behind each image.
Location: "The Gift" is in the Student Union Walkway, between the Student Union and Davis Library.
Landscape: The artwork makes up the walkway along side the Frank Porter Graham Student Union
City: Chapel Hill
County: Orange
Subjects: American Indian Monuments
11 July 2014 | Commemorative Landscapes of North Carolina