“The fires created radical moments of awareness for the need for climate action,” Kaino says. “When you drive to work and the sky is orange, everyone needs to take notice.”
He collaborated with the Northern California Karuk Tribe and Native storytellers and activists, such as Dakota and Lakota teacher and community organizer Breanne Luger, and Laundi Keepseagle, a Lakota creative producer and community architect, both from the Standing Rock reservation.
Visitors to the show arrive at a row of anonymous warehouses just south of downtown Los Angeles. Skyscrapers rise in the distance while cars rush by on the highway. But inside, the exhibit is hushed and dark, as you walk through what feels like a towering forest that smells of old wood. Many of the tree trunks are sustainably salvaged redwood trees that have died from insect infestation or drought; others are cast replicas.
At different stops along the way, visitors can hear Native American stories, including one, narrated by actor Jesse Williams, about a ceremony where a Karuk man jumps into a river from a high rock, bellyflopping to open the river for spawning salmon.