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2007 January/February
By Site Editor
| Published 01/1/2007
| US Travel , Painting , Beadwork , Cultural Items , Jewelry/Lapidary , 2007 , Colville , Navajo , Oglala , Sioux , Lakota , Kiowa
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ON THE COVER
Virginia
Boone (Navajo) collects wild plants in Arizona for Medicine of the
People, the company she operates with her husband, Leonard Marcus. She
is one of the small but growing number of Native Americans beginning to
find their way back to traditional Native uses of plants for health and
healing.
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2006 September/October
By Site Editor
| Published 09/1/2006
| Dance , 2006 , Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs , Arikara , Mandan , Hidatsu , Diné , Yakima , Wintu , Shoshone , Paiute , Nez Perce , Apache , Pueblo , Lakota , Navajo
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ON THE COVER
Tawny Hale (Navajo/Lakota) of Los Angeles, a member of the American
Indian Dance Theatre since 2003, is dressed for a ladies’ fancy shawl
dance. She is one of the many professionals presenting traditional
Native dance across the Americas.
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Petroforms
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Throughout the ages, mankind has created relationships with the stars. Cultures wove their beliefs and traditions into stories told around campfires or inside their homes. While modern man typically considers this sharing process to have been mostly an oral tradition, perhaps some enterprising ancient North Americans also put their cosmology into a more permanent record. Instead of paper, they used the ground; instead of pens and pencils, they used colored stones.
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2005 July/August
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ON THE COVER Floyd
Red Crow Westerman (Dakota), star of numerous movies and television
shows, wears a 19th-century Crow war shirt of indigo-dyed wool trade
cloth with ermine fur drops, and holds a Crow tanned-hide rifle case,
circa 1890, with Venetian seed beads.
Click on "Full Story" to view the complete Table of Contents.
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1996 Spring
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ON THE COVER
Mickey Tiger (Seminole) displays a traditional “patchwork” garment she is making in this historic photo, circa 1936.
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2005 January/February
By Site Editor
| Published 01/5/2005
| Painting , Katsinas/Kachinas , Jewelry/Lapidary , 2005 , Bannock , Maidu , Yaqui , Shoshone , Seminole , Luiseño , Choctaw , Hopi , Pueblo , Lakota , Navajo , Cherokee
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ON THE COVER This
spectacular dancer, Susan Armijo (Mexica), a member of the Aztec-styled
dance and music troupe America Indigena, led by flautist Xavier Quijas
Yxayotl, enthralled audiences last March at the Heard Museum Guild
Indian Fair & Market and will return for this year’s event.
Click on "Full Story" to view the complete Table of Contents.
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New Faces
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 Rhonda Holy Bear\'s meticulously researched and elegantly crafted dolls, Jared Chavez\'s innovative jewelry and silverwork, Liz Wallace\'s silver and turquoise jewelry plus her richly hued plique à jour enamel and Donald Sockyma\'s beautiful katsinas are explored here.
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1997 Summer
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ON THE COVER
This lone star variation quilt, 76 inches wide by 91 inches long, was
created by Margaret (Ana) and David (Ottawa) of Peshawbestown, Michigan
circa 1920. Superimposed is the photo of an unknown Lakota quilter of
the same period.
Click on "full story" below to view table of contents.
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1996 Fall
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ON THE COVER
Standing on the site of the forthcoming National Museum of the American
Indian in Washington, D.C. are (left to right) John Colonghi (Aleut),
campaign director, and W. Richard West (Southern Cheyenne), founding
director.
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1991 Winter
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ON THE COVER
Nathan Lee Chasing His Horse (Lakota) in the role of Smiles A Lot in the film Dances With Wolves.
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1989 Fall
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ON THE COVER
Natives of Siberia, U.S.S.R., play centuries-old rhythms on walrus-hide drums. Photo by Paul Schurke.
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1989 Summer
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ON THE COVER
Tarahumara musicians of northern Mexico pause during a Semana Santa festival. Photo by Richard D. Fisher.
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2002 July/August
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ON THE COVER Artist Ed Archie NoiseCat
They're talented, they're innovative, and they're in demand at Indian
market events nationwide. Glass, wood and metal artist Ed Archie
NoiseCat (Shuswap/Stlitlimx) is one of the market stars we profile in
"Five Market Artists." Cover photo by Wendy McEahern.
Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.
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2004 July/August
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On the Cover
The energy and excitement of powwow dancing is captured in this image
taken at the Arizona State University annual powwow in Tucson. Photo by
Louis Baca Santa Clara Pueblo/Tewa.
Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.
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2004 November/December
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ON THE COVER
Ron His Horse Is Thunder (Hunkpapa Lakota), the great great grandson of
Sitting Bull, is filling a major position in today’s battlelines
involving the future of Native culture and life as president of Sitting
Bull College in Fort Yates, N.D. on the Standing Rock Resevation.
Click on "Full Story" to view the complete Table of Contents.
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2000 November/December
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ON THE COVER Irene Bedard
From Anchorage, Alaska to New York City, the dramatic calling of Irene
Bedard has led this Inupiat Eskimo/Cree actor to roles in Lakota Woman, Naturally Native and Smoke Signals. With her theatrical and Native roots firmly established, the voice behind Pocahontas celebrates two new releases this year, The Lost Child and Wild Flowers. Bedard glimmers in a 14K gold, inlaid pendant and bracelet, courtesy of Ray Tracey Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Click on "Full Story" to view the complete Table of Contents.
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2001 July/August
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ON THE COVER Fritz Scholder: A Lust For Life
An in-depth look at and conversation with a leading figure of the
contemporary Indian art world, including a glimpse back at his
formative years in Santa Fe; his views on life and death; discussion of
his current work, exhibitions and a new book; and the role of an artist
in the world.
Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents
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