Friday, Dec. 31, 2004
native
american arts daily news, presented by
amerindianarts.us
Museums
& Galleries
Long Beach Press-Telegram
- Long Beach,CA,USA
... "Native American
Art and Artifacts' includes clothing, pottery and more from the Prayer
House Outreach; through today. ... "The Arts and Crafts
Movement in Europe ...
Out
& About
Press-Enterprise
(subscription) - Riverside,CA,USA
... FENDER MUSEUM OF
MUSIC AND THE ARTS, "The 50th Anniversary of the ...
RIVERSIDE MUNICIPAL MUSEUM, exhibits on natural, local and Native
American history, 9 am-5 pm ...
Stuart
News entertainment calendar: December 31
Fort
Pierce Tribune - Fort Pierce,FL,USA
... EAGLE PIPE DANCERS
-- New Year's social, featuring Native American arts/crafts,
pot luck dinner, drum circle, dancing and mini Pow-Wow from 10 am to 4
pm Jan. ...
New
Year Bageantry
Dissident Voice
- Santa Rosa,CA,USA
... it would be an Indian or black
native family. ... in Rio or Bombay, or cast upon the American
wastelands of ... recent writing can be found in his Arts & Entertainment ...
Get
Out Guide
OregonLive.com - Portland,OR,USA
...
indoor exhibit areas that include "By Hand Through Memory,"
a permanent exhibit of Native American artistry by Doris
Swayze Bounds; visual-arts displays; and ...
Heirloom
passed down by generations
Redwood
Falls Gazette - Redwood Falls,MN,USA
... Centre (where
the Roadshow was held), eventually making her way to the tribal arts
table ... They also had no idea there was Native American
blood in the family tree ...
Principal
is proof education betters life
Arizona
Republic - Phoenix,AZ,USA
... college scholarships and
grants, she picked up a bachelor's degree in liberal arts and
later ... "Whether a person is African-American, Native
American or Hispanic ...
Fruitful
winter harvest
Newark Star Ledger
- Newark,NJ,USA
... Simultaneously, Montclair will mount
"Native American Photographs and Jewelry from the Museum's
... this exhibition is part of "Bridging the Arts:
A Hunterdon ...
Amesbury
calendar
Amesbury News - Amesbury,MA,USA
...
Lobby for the Arts hours are Monday to Wednesday, 8 am to 4 pm;
Thursdays ... The book for this meeting is "Two Old Women",
a Native American folktale set in the ...
This once a day Google Alert is brought to you by Google.
Hero, Hawk, and Open Hand
Early tribal artifacts put in spotlight
Little-known items focus of exhibit in Chicago
CHICAGO - A translucent, larger-than-life hand with long, tapering fingers lends an air of mystery to a new exhibit of ancient and little-known tribal art at the Art Institute of Chicago.
"Hero, Hawk, and Open Hand" opened Nov. 20 and runs through Jan. 30, 2005. It is scheduled to be shown at The St. Louis Art Museum from March 4 to May 30, 2005, and at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History from early July to late September.
Navajo artist Teddy Draper Workshops
Chinle, Arizona (Canyon DeChelly)-
Seminars and workshops have limited capacity and usually require enrollment months in advance.
Workshop information for 2005
March 15-19, instructor Elmer Yazzie, "cut yucca brush" watercolor technique.
May 16-20, instructor Teddy Draper, Jr., pastel techniques, insights into art, culture, and connecting to nature.
June 7-11, Indian Jewelry Basics (class limited to 4 students).
June 7-11, instructor Teddy Draper, Jr., pastel techniques, insights into art, culture, and connecting to nature.
Contact Teddy Draper atdechelly2000@yahoo.com
Web Sites: Literacy in Indigenous Communities by L. David van Broekhuizen, Ph.D. (2000)
Indigenous Peoples Literature
Wisdom of the Old People
HTML Format (70K)
PDF Format(117K)
Essay on the Zuni World View
Excerpt (Complete article is available in PDF)
Cushing also cited an incidence where he showed a pole that accompanies a theodolite to an old Zuni man and asked him what he thought the name of it was. In response the old man inquired as to the use of the item. After briefly describing the implementation of the device the old man provided a rather lengthy sentence-word that Cushing translated as "heights of the world progressively measuring stick". The next day Cushing took the pole to the extreme corner of the pueblo and began "to flourish it around" until a middle-aged man relented to curiosity and asked what it was. Cushing then provided the Zuni name he had learned the day before and the man promptly requested, "Can they actually tell how far up and down journeying the world is?" [105].
Indian band seeks to regain its birthright
By David Whitney
Wintu Indians
At War Against Dam, Tribe Turns to Old Ways
Petition in Support of the Winnemem Wintu Tribe
Notices:
Registration for the 31st Annual 2005 Bilingual Multicultural Education
and Equity Conference is now
available online
Teaching and Learning
Through a Cultural Eye
February 9-11, 2005
Sheraton Anchorage Hotel, Anchorage, Alaska
Sponsored by
Alaska Association for Bilingual Education
Native Educators' Association
Alaska State Department of Education and Early Development
For more information contact:
The Coordinators, Inc.
329 F Street, Suite 208, Anchorage, AK 99501
Phone: 907/646-9000 * Fax: 907/646-9001
Haidu Language Project
Currently, only seven Kasaan Haidas speak the Kasaan Haida dialect with
varying degrees of fluency--all elders over the age of 75. This summer, I urged the Kasaan Haida
Heritage Foundation (KHHF) to allow me to utilize the foundation's nonprofit
status to seek funding and conduct projects that preserve our elders'
knowledge.
In September, we created the position of Media Specialist in which I intend
to raise money and interview our elders, especially in regards to the Haida
language. I will produce, direct, and coordinate a video documentary to raise
awareness and archive the language. I plan to make the results available in
digital formats on the KHHF website.
Donations received from now until December 31, 2004 will earn the donor
a Grassroots Founder designation. I ask for a relatively small gift of 25 to 100
dollars. Donor's names will appear in the KHHF newsletter and donations
will be eligible for a tax deduction for this year. Grassroots Founders get
special on-screen mention in the documentary.
Please send checks (payable to "KHHF") to:
Kasaan Haida Heritage Foundation
600 University Street, Suite 3010
Seattle, WA 98101-1129
Memo area on your check designating funds for
"Media Specialist/Projects".
Sincerely,
Frederick Olsen, Jr.
For more information, email me or go to
http://kavilco.com/pages/
aboutkhhf.html
KHHF is a registered 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization (EIN 92-0169568).
Clever Frog - Klamath
One day Coyote went out hunting and had good luck. In the morning he shot a squirrel. At midday he caught only a mouse. But in the afternoon he shot a fine plump rabbit for his dinner. He had been hungry for days, and so, as he trotted home through the woods with the rabbit slung on his back. Coyote was pleased with himself.
Suddenly, where the path led out from under the trees and into the tall grass he spied a frog hopping along ahead of him.
"Ho!" cried Coyote, and he pounced, pinning poor Frog to the ground.
"What luck!" said Coyote. "Here is a nice juicy morsel to do me until I reach home and roast my dinner."
But as Coyote's teeth came close. Frog cried out in a great bullfrog voice. "Hold, Brother Coyote!"
Coyote stared at the little green fellow under his foot. "Why should I?" said he.
"Hai!" Frog thought quickly. "I meant to say, 'Don't eat me today." For then you would miss tomorrow's race."
"Race?" Coyote's ears pricked up, for he loved races. "What race? I have heard of no race."
"That is because I did not think of it before," said Frog. "You and I shall run a race. Brother Coyote, and if you win, you shall eat me on the spot."
"Agreed!" said Coyote, who could never turn down a dare or pass up a bet. For of course he would win, and Frog would taste as good-or better-tomorrow.
When it was agreed where and when they should meet. Coyote went on his way. Frog hopped down to the stream in the meadow to find his friends.
"I must run a race with Coyote tomorrow," said he to his friends. "At noon we will run from the spring to the alder tree at the bottom of the meadow and back. And if Coyote wins, he will eat me."
The other frogs threw up their hand? and laughed at his foolishness. "Hai, Coyote will win! How can he lose?"
Frog grinned a wide grin. "He will not win if I have the help of my friends," said he. "Not if one of you goes early to hide by the alder tree. Not if--when the others signal that Coyote is coming through the tall grass you give three jumps to make him think that I have been ahead of him from the start. I will hide near the spring, and when I see him coming I will jump over the finish line just before him."
Frog's friends agreed.
Late the next morning when Coyote arrived at the spring. Frog was there before him, hopping up and down as if he were eager to race. When the noonday sun was overhead, they started. Coyote dashed off as fast as he could go. Frog made three hops into the deep grass and sat down to wait.
Coyote raced on, but seeing no Frog at his heels or ahead, was sure he had left him far behind. Then, as he spied the alder tree before him, to his great surprise he saw the frog making his first hop into the turn around the tree.
"Now this is very strange," thought Coyote, and he ran faster still. "I did not see him pass me." On the frog's third hop Coyote shot past and called over his shoulder, "Fast, but not fast enough! I will wait for you at the finish line."
Coyote ran as fast as ever he had, but when he came in sight of the finish line there was Frog, making his last three hops.
"Fast, but not fast enough," said Frog as Coyote came panting up.
Coyote went home in disgust.
California
Back in the Beforetime: Tales of the California Indians [the Klamath River
region in the north to the inland desert mountains and the southern
coastlands] Retold by Jane Louise Curry, 1987
Submitted by Wolf Walker
From Blue Panther Keeper of Stories.


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