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Native American Heritage Week: Michael Namingha
©Michael Namingha, Chaco (Yupkoyvi)
Today we would like to introduce you to the work of Michael Namingha.
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Native American Heritage Week: Sarah Sense: Hinushi
©Sarah Sense, Hinushi 1 2023 archival inkjet prints on Hahnemuhle bamboo paper and Hahnemuhle rice paper, wax, tape 40″ x 80″ (45″ x 85″ framed) collection of the C
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Native American Heritage Week: Interview with Casey Riley/ In Our Hands: Native Photography, 1890 to Now
Larry McNeil Dakl’aweidi K’eet Gooshi H’it, Killer Whale Fin House Tlingit / Nisga’a, born 1955 Herbert Johnson, Man of the Bear Clan, 2018 Palladium print Courtesy of t
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Native American Heritage Week: Interview with Jill Ahlberg Yohe / In Our Hands: Native Photography, 1890 to Now
Brian Adams Iñupiaq, born 1985 Marie Rexford of Kaktovik, Alaska preparing maktak for the villages Thanksgiving Day feast, 2015 from I am Inuit series Medium format film – Type C pri
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Native American Heritage Week: Cara Romero
© Cara Romero. Courtesy of the artist. All rights reserved.
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Redefining Historical Narratives Through Indigenous Perspectives.
Mural as part of the exhibition Garden for Boston at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
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Evan Benally Atwood: Black Hills
©Evan Benally Atwood, Black Hills
This week, we will be exploring projects inspired by place. Today, we’ll be looking at Evan Benally Atwood’s series Black Hills.
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Indigenous Photographers Week: Kapulei Flores
©Kapulei Flores, No ka lāhui (for the people), 2019. During the 2019 frontline stance for Mauna Kea we saw how powerful our communities are, especailly when we come together.
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Indigenious Photographers Week: Jaida Grey Eagle
©Jaida Grey Eagle, Standing Rock resistance camp on Oct. 1, 2016 in Cannonball, North Dakota.
Jaida Grey Eagle is an Oglala Lakota artist, currently located in St. Paul, MN.
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Indigenous Photographers Week: Dakota Mace
©Dakota Mace, Náhookǫs Bikǫʼ I, 2022
Dakota Mace (Diné) is an interdisciplinary artist whose work focuses on translating the language of Diné history and beliefs.
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Indigenous Photographers Week: Nicholas Galanin
©Nicholas Galanin, Things Are Looking Native, Native’s Looking Whiter, 2012, giclée, 42 x 30 3/4 inches (106.7 x 78.
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