Native Peoples Magazine - http://www.nativepeoples.com/article
1998 Spring
http://www.nativepeoples.com/article/articles/171/1/1998-Spring/Page1.html
By Site Editor
Published on 01/12/1998
 
Site Editor

 

Spring 1998 Cover (lrg)ON THE COVER
Coyote, which artist Harry Fonseca (Nisenan Maidu) dubs the “infamous Native American folk hero” in this acrylic-on-canvas work “Shuffle Off to Buffalo,” takes to the stage in an upcoming exhibition at the National Museum of the American Indian.

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1998 Spring Table of Contents

Spring 1998 Cover (lrg)BUY THIS ISSUE

ON THE COVER
Coyote, which artist Harry Fonseca (Nisenan Maidu) dubs the “infamous Native American folk hero” in this acrylic-on-canvas work “Shuffle Off to Buffalo,” takes to the stage in an upcoming exhibition at the National Museum of the American Indian.

FEATURES

Frame Those Blankets: Weaving New Traditions
Native artists have embraced a new medium: the contemporary trade blanket. And it’s turning the art-collecting world upside down. By Charles J. Lohrmann.

Tewa Tales: Yo! Ken Alfonso Here
The late anthropologist Alfonso Ortiz (San Juan Pueblo) altered the world’s view of the Native American, and he did so in unconventional ways, as a friend and UCLA professor explains. By Kenneth Lincoln.

Poetry in Wood
The Northwest Coast Unangan creation story comes alive in the sculptures of John Hoover (Unangan), including those now gracing the lobby of the Alaska Native Medical Center in Anchorage. By Sunnie Empie. Photos by Hart Empie.

Seeing (a Different Shade of) Red
Forget the stereotype of stoic Indian faces. Native Americans have been laughing for a long time. By Suzan Shown Harjo (Cheyenne & Hodulgee Muskogee). Illustrated with works by George Blake (Hupa/Yurok), Jack Malotte (Western Shoshone), Judith Lowry (Maidu/Pit River), Marcus Amerman (Choctaw), Jeffery Chapman (Chippewa) and Marwin Begaye (Diné).


Warrior Artists
Prisoners of war more than 120 years ago, the spirits of these Kiowa and Comanche men live through their powerful drawings in a soon-to-be-published book by the National Geographic Society. By Herman J. Viola. Drawings by Zotom.

Reclaiming Culture
A people once thought extinct will come alive when the Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center opens in Connecticut. By Ben Winton (Yaqui).

Drawing the Line
George Russell got tired of getting stumped when his non-Indian co-workers asked him about Native America. So he did something about it, producing an informative large-scale map of Indian America. By George Russell (Saginaw Chippewa).

DEPARTMENTS

Viewpoint
Renowned author N. Scott Momaday (Kiowa), winner of the Pulitzer Prize, explains in a question-and-answer format why he’s taken time from his busy schedule to launch a nonprofit organization, the Buffalo Trust.

Viewpoint
Indian journalists are vitally needed to tell stories from a Native perspective and to raise cultural sensitivities. By Ben Winton (Yaqui).

Spirit of the Harvest
No food is more important to the peoples of the Northwest than salmon, explored in text and a recipe for roasted salmon steaks. By Beverly Cox and Martin Jacobs.

Collector’s Corner
Tips on the best ways to conserve valuable textile arts. By fiber artist Margaret Wood (Navajo/Seminole).

Book Reviews
People of the Seventh Fire: Returning Lifeways of Native America, edited by Dagmar Thorpe (Sauk/Thakiwaki); The Long March: The Choctaw’s Gift to Irish Famine Relief, written and illustrated by Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick. By Alan Tack.

Video/Audio Reviews
Eagle and the Raven: A Purification by Banishment, a video directed by George Amiotte (Lakota) from Heaven Fire Productions; Blues From the Sky, by Indigenous; and The Ghosts of St. Augustine, by Tonemah (Kiowa/Comanche/Tuscarora). By David Claudio Iglesias (Kuna).

Artist in Profile
Extraordinary basket weaver and bead artist Ennis Pack (Mountain Maidu) of northeastern California. By Linda Martin (Diné).

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