Native Peoples Magazine - http://www.nativepeoples.com/article
2006 July/August
http://www.nativepeoples.com/article/articles/200/1/2006-JulyAugust/Page1.html
By Site Editor
Published on 07/1/2006
 
Site Editor

 

 july/august 2006 coverON THE COVER
Benjamin Harjo, Jr. (Shawnee/Seminole) has an infectious sense of mirth and creative energy, which he pours into his award-winning paintings, both large and small. Photo courtesy Ackerman McQueen.

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2006 July/August Table of Contents

Benjamin Harjo, Jr.BUY THIS ISSUE


ON THE COVER
Benjamin Harjo, Jr. (Shawnee/Seminole) has an infectious sense of mirth and creative energy, which he pours into his award-winning paintings, both large and small. Photo courtesy Ackerman McQueen.

FEATURES

Splendor in the Glass: Masters of a New Medium
Though Native artisans have not been working in glass for many years, they are quickly proving to be very adept at this ancient art, as shown by the careers of Chris Tarpley (Choctaw/Chickasaw/Cherokee), Preston Singletary (Tlingit), Susan Point (Coast Salish), Tony Jojola (Isleta Pueblo) and Marvin Oliver (Quinault/Isleta Pueblo). By Russ Tall Chief (Osage).

Small World: The Art of the Miniature
Some of the Native art world’s most superlative pieces practically require a magnifying glass to fully appreciate them, as we see in the work of silver artisan Ira Custer (Navajo), potter Allen Aragon (Navajo), painter Ben Harjo (Shawnee/Seminole), basket weaver Florence Manygoats (Navajo), bead artisan Susan Laure Peebles (Red Lake Chippewa) and basket weaver Everett Pikyavit (Paiute).
By Deborah Utacia Krol (Salinan/Esselen).

Santa Fe Indian Market: Top of Their Class
Among the more than 1,000 artists at the 2005 Santa Fe Indian Market, a handful were chosen for special awards—among them sculptor Tony Lee (Navajo), jeweler Dawn Wallace (Aleut) and katsina carver Aaron Fredericks (Hopi). We take a look at their lives and work. Plus, a calendar of the major events of the 2006 Market. By Dottie Indyke.

Deadly Beauty: Traditional Native Weapons
Ancient weapons designed by North American Natives for defense and hunting extend back into the mists of history, and in today’s light often embody an odd sense of beauty and “right design.” Many Native artists are now producing contemporary examples of these deadly tools as works of art. By Gussie Fauntleroy.


DEPARTMENTS

Viewpoint
The repatriation laws designed to protect and return human remains and sacred and funerary objects to Indian tribes are basically working as planned, but some backsliding is occurring with continued resistance to the concept of American Indians as people, not property. By Suzan Shown Harjo (Cheyenne & Hodulgee Muscogee).

On the Wind
Plans are proceeding rapidly on an outdoor center in Rapid City, South Dakota to honor and promote the great Sioux nations. Also, other important news in the arts, education, the environment, business, politics, sports, health and other realms of life in Indian Country. By Daniel Gibson.

Happening
Join us as we hang out this summer among the Chickasaw people in Oklahoma, who have lined up a slew of exciting events. Plus details on other special events of Native interest across North America. By Daniel Gibson.

Pathways
Coast to coast, Indian tribes now own and operate some of the world’s finest golf courses. Here’s a close look at 10 of the best, with notes on an additional 17 “links to die for.” By Richard Mahler.

History
Few people are aware that Alcatraz Island, famous for its criminal prisoners, actually began as a military prison. Among its early inhabitants were scores of Indians, including a group of Hopis interned in 1895. By Larry Tritten.

Galleries
The Windy City has a new, notable art and cultural facility, Trickster Gallery, run by the American Indian Center of Chicago. Also, brief looks at other Native-oriented galleries throughout the continent. By Russ Tall Chief (Osage).

Museums
Preserving, celebrating and expanding the art, history and culture of New Mexico’s eight northern pueblos is the mission of the Indian-owned and-operated Poeh Cultural Center and Museum just north of Santa Fe. Also, notes on other museum exhibitions coast to coast. By Wendy Weston (Diné).

Books
Explore the concepts of and specific places where the physical and spiritual realms intersect in Where the Lightning Strikes: The Lives of American Indian Sacred Places by Peter Nabokov; and become an expert on the precious blue stone in The Allure of Turquoise, edited by Arnold Vigil. Plus other recently published titles of interest. By Deborah Utacia Krol (Salinan/Esselen).

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