Tuesday, January 11, 2005

Tues., Jan. 11, 2005

native american arts daily news, presented by
amerindianarts.us

Symphony, Chamber Music Society announce festivals
Seattle Times - Seattle,WA,USA
... to bluegrass, hip-hop, jazz, Native-American and dulcimer ... the next generation of American symphonists, including ... 350-seat Fulton Performing Arts Center, 20301 ...

Before A Joint Session Of The First Session
KTVB - Boise,ID,USA
... see a team of men -- helped by a young Native American woman -- dedicated ... At Idaho State University, the beautiful new Stephens Performing Arts Center will ...

 This once a day Google Alert is brought to you by Google.


Date: Mon, 10 Jan 2005 16:21:22 -0000
From: "ghwelker"
Subject: "Good trade"

THE NAVAJO WOMAN

Susan was driving home from one of her teaching assignments in Northern Arizona when she saw an elderly Navajo woman walking on the side of the road.

As the trip was a long and quiet one, she stopped the car and asked the Navajo woman if she would like a ride. The woman climbed into the car and Susan resumed driving.

After a bit of small talk, the Navajo woman noticed a bag on the seat next to Susan. "What in bag?" asked the woman.

Susan glanced at the bag and said "It's a bottle of wine. I got it for my husband."

The Navajo woman was silent for a moment. Then speaking with the quiet wisdom of an elder said, "Good trade."


From: Wells Mahkee, Jr.
[mailto:wpmahkee@yahoo.com]
Sent: Friday, January 07, 2005 11:50 AM
Subject: Zuni Pueblo Band

Dear friends,

The Zuni Pueblo Band has been invited to march in the Presidential Inaugural Parade on January 20th. The band considers this a great honor and has the opportunity to showcase Zuni Pueblo on a national level. They are presently attempting to raise approximately $22,000 to take care of travel and motel expenses.

The band will be holding a benefit concert here in Zuni on Sunday, January 9th, time and location TBA...

If you would like to make a monetary donation to the band, you are free to do so. For further information, you may contact either myself at wpmahkee@yahoo.com or Raeleva Sanchez at rae_who@yahoo.com. The band is included in the listing of parade participants at this link. You can also help by forwarding this message to your friends, family and other e-mail contacts.

Elahkwa/Thank you!
Wells
You can help support this effort by
Bidding on this painting


Date: Fri, 07 Jan 2005 01:56:00 -0000
From: "ghwelker"
Subject: Living in America: The American Indian Experience
The American Museum of Natural History
presents
Living in America: The American Indian Experience

Three Saturdays,
January 15, 22 and 29
1:00-5:30 p.m.
Kaufmann Theater, first floor

Learn about the indigenous cultures of the Northeast through lectures, performances, and films. Journey through "Native New York" with Evan T. Pritchard, founder of the Center for Algonquin Culture, and learn how Broadway used to be the Mohican Trail. Enjoy the Mohawk Singers and Dancers, and take a look down the "Pow Wow Highway" with actor Gary Farmer, and much more. For details, visit
or
call 212-769-5315.
From: borreror@amnh.org


Date: Thu, 06 Jan 2005 02:21:54 -0000
From: "ghwelker"
Subject: ~LEONARD PELTIER’s Magnificent ‘Political Platform’

~LEONARD PELTIER's Magnificent `Political Platform'~ from the brand new book ~HAVE YOU THOUGHT of LEONARD PELTIER LATELY?~
[Passed on by Harvey Arden 12-13-04]
harvey@haveyouthought.com
~

LEONARD PELTIER—2004 Presidential Candidate, 2004 Nobel Peace Prize nominee, humanitarian, philosopher, author, poet, Pipe-carrier, political prisoner, archetypal victim, patriot of the Indian People, hero of Indigenous Peoples everywhere, accomplishes amazing things from his 5-1/2x9-foot cinderblock cell at USP Leavenworth.

Here, I pass on this `political platform' that LEONARD wrote in the year 2000, when we ran a national Presidential write-in campaign for Leonard (he publically withdrew in October 2000, as Ralph Nader should have graciously and sensibly done, so he wouldn't draw votes away from Gore—a little-known story among many others in the new book ~HAVE YOU THOUGHT of LEONARD PELTIER LATELY?~*).

Also please visit Leonard's own website: www.leonardpeltier.org

THE NEW BOOK ON LEONARD PELTIER IS NOW OUT! Order copies NOW for Holiday gifts!! ~HAVE YOU THOUGHT of LEONARD PELTIER LATELY?~
A Living Memoir with Artifacts
by Harvey Arden, Edited & Compiled by George Bowe Blitch with companion website www.haveyouthought.com & 8 full-color pages of recent paintings by Leonard Peltier
with Special Contributions by:
Leonard Peltier
George Blitch
Barry Bachrach
Standing Deer
Arthur J. Miller
Lawrence Sampson
Carter Camp
Stephanie M. Schwartz
Keith Rabin

Please Order copies NOW for yourself & your friends at: www.haveyouthought.com or send a check for $23+$5=$28 per copy ($5 s/h on one copy; $2 s/h each add'l copy) made out to 'Have You Thought' & mail to:
Have You Thought
1410 Blalock Road, #420
Houston, TX 77055

For those who may have an interest, there's a new interview with author Harvey Arden about the Wisdomkeepers, Leonard Peltier, Australian Aboriginals & the state of the world...now archived at:
http://www.prophecykeepers.com/arden.html


Date: Sat, 1 Jan 2005 11:57:03 -0700
From: George Lessard
Subject: Our Land - Contemporary Art from the Arctic
Our Land - Contemporary Art from the Arctic
THROUGH JANUARY 30, 2005

From Nov. 26, 2004 through Jan. 30, 2005, the Peabody Essex Museum hosts Our Land: Contemporary Art from the Arctic, the first major museum exhibition of contemporary art from Canada's newest territory, Nunavut. The exhibition includes more than 50 artworks-from sculpture, prints, and textile art to photography, video, and sound installations-all created in the last half-century, a time of burgeoning artistic and cultural awareness and pride among Canada's Inuit. Our Land is a collaborative project of the Peabody Essex Museum, the Government of Canada, and the Government of Nunavut.

Newspaper coverage
Peabody Essex Museum
[excerpt]

Today, Inuit art includes a wide range of media and can be found in public and private collections in Canada and other parts of the world. Germaine Arnaktauyok, Kenojuak Ashevak, Pitseolak Ashoona, Pudlo Pudlat, Jesse Oonark, Zacharias Kunuk, and Lucie Idlout are just a few of the artists who have contributed to a vital body of sculpture, drawing, printmaking, textile arts, and work in other media, that are featured in Our Land . The outstanding creative achievements of such artists have helped give voice to Inuit values and beliefs and spurred economic and social development in their communities. Our Land aims to introduce the art and unique worldview of Canada's contemporary Inuit to visitors of the Peabody Essex Museum.

In addition to the exhibition, catalogue, and DVD, the museum will host an active calendar of public programming featuring Inuit art and culture, including films, lectures, artist demonstrations, online exhibitions, and dance and musical performances.

Our Land: Contemporary Art from the Arctic , has received financial support from the Government of Nunavut's Department of Culture, Language, Elders and Youth, the Government of Canada, the Constance Killam Trust, and the Elizabeth Killam Rodgers Trust.

Visit the online exhibition
GEORGE LESSARD
Information & Media Specialist


Subject: Tlingit Whale House Series

Date: Mon, 3 Jan 2005 17:02:28 -0700 From: George Lessard

Nine years ago, brilliantly carved Tlingit artifacts linking the Chilkat people with their ancestors were sold and removed from the village of Klukwan. Since then, families, neighbors and lawyers have fought bitterly over ownership. No one sees them now.

By Marilee Enge

Whale House Series Series At A Glance
Part 1 : The sale of the Whale House legacy.
Part 2 : Carving the masterworks. Modern-day carvers and anthropologists follow the trail of a Tlingit artist of profound skill and vision
Part 3 : A Tlingit buyer of Tlingit artifacts. Tlingit nobleman Louis Shotridge, so of a keeper of the Whale House, becomes a scholar of his people - and a controversial collector
Part 4 :A dealer's passion for the Whale House. A Seattle art dealer's decade of obsession ends in bitterness and in court.
Part 5 :Epic sage becomes litigation. A tangle of bloodlines and birthrights is now a court's to unravel.


Date: Sat, 01 Jan 2005 16:54:45 -0000
From: "ghwelker"
Subject: Museum loses Indian artifacts to burglary
Museum loses Indian artifacts to burglary
ASSOCIATED PRESS

DAGGETT - A break-in discovered Christmas Day has robbed the museum in this Mojave Desert town of its most prized possessions, including antique dolls and American Indian artifacts on loan from local families.

The thieves methodically cleared out glass display cases in the Daggett Museum, said curator Beryl Bell, who discovered the burglary when she went to feed her goldfish over the holiday.

"It's really heartbreaking for a small museum," Bell said Wednesday.

The stolen Native American artifacts include a basket appraised at $3,500, a Navajo sash and two large clay Acoma pots that had never been appraised but are very valuable, said Leslie Lloyd, the president of the Daggett Historical Society, which runs the museum.

The thieves also took antique dolls, model trains and other toys, farming implements and examples of rocks from the area, Lloyd said.

The thieves ignored the computers and copy machine in the office of a local government agency that shares the low-slung modular building with the museum, but they stole $2 in coins from Lloyd's desk and a museum donation jar that contained about $10, she said.

Despite the theft of the change, Lloyd believes the burglars were experienced, as they left no fingerprints and took steps to disable the alarm system -- even though it wasn't operational at the time of the break-in.

"This appeared to be a very neat operation and it appeared they had a shopping list," she said.

The historical society has notified the Antique Tribal Art Dealers Association, which plans to post news of the break-in on its Web site and will inform its 250 members.

The historical society is offering a $500 reward to anyone who can provide information leading to the arrest and conviction.
Glenn Welker
Editor, List Manager, and Web Master
for
Indigenous Peoples Literature


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 at
dechelly2000@yahoo.com

Web Sites:
Indigenous Peoples Literature
Wisdom of the Old People

Literacy in Indigenous Communities by L. David van Broekhuizen, Ph.D. (2000)
HTML Format (70K)
PDF Format(117K)
Literacy in first languages in indigenous communities is a complex topic that generates lively discussion. This research synthesis explores the notions of national, mother-tongue, multiple, and biliteracies. It presents important information pertaining to threatened languages, language shift, and language loss. Examples of culturally relevant uses of literacy in indigenous communities and issues related to first-language literacy instruction are also provided.

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).


Coos - Brief Notes

The Coos tribe, for whom Coos Bay in Oregon was named, are now almost entirely assimilated into the surrounding culture. They once occupied the Pacific coastal lands of Oregon.
From Blue Panther Keeper of Stories.


Contest Between the Thunder-Bird and the Raven - Blackfoot

Once the Thunder-Bird and the Raven tried their respective powers. The Thunder-Bird carried off the wife of the Raven and refused to release her upon the Raven's demand. Then the Raven made medicine. He caused winter with a great snowfall. It was so cold that the only way in which the Thunder-Bird could keep from freezing was by constantly flashing his lightning. Yet the power of the Raven was so great that the Thunder-Bird could barely keep a hole melted out large enough for his body to rest in. At last he was forced to give up Raven's wife. Now, when there is much snow or a cold wave, the people go out and call to the Raven to take pity on the people. Anthropological Papers American Museum of Natural History, Vol. II, 1908. Submitted by Wolf Walker.
From Blue Panther Keeper of Stories.

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