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2006 November/December
By Site Editor
| Published 10/31/2006
| Music , Cultural Items , Photography/Graphics , 2006 , Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs , Diné , Comanche , Quechua , Yaqui , Sioux , Seminole , Muskogee , Apache , Tlingit , Haida , Pueblo , Dakota , Blackfeet , Navajo , Cherokee
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ON THE COVER
Musician and flutemaker Bryan Akipa (Sisseton-Wahpeton Sioux) seen here
holding a five-hole, old-style Dakota flute he created around 1984 from
eastern aromatic red cedar he gathered from the Badlands of South
Dakota. Photo by Don Doll, J.S.
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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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1994 Fall
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ON THE COVER
For the inaugural exhibition All Roads Are Good: Native Voices on Life and Culture
at the Gustav Heye Center of the National Museum of the American Indian
in New York City, curator Gerald McMaster (Plains Cree) arranged these
moccasins into a round dance formation.
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Traditional Fashion From Seminole & Plains to Navajo & Pueblo
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Larry Price—originally from Sheep Springs, New Mexico and a member of the Navajo Nation—has a passion for creating photographic images. Price didn't get serious about photography until January 2002 when he came across an article in Photographic Magazine about a photographer from Flagstaff, Arizona. The imagery in those pages moved him.
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The Art of George Morrison and Allan Houser
By Gregory Schaaf, Ph.D. (Cherokee)
| Published 09/1/2004
| September/October , Painting , Photography/Graphics , Sculpture , Gregory Schaaf, PhD. , Museums , US Travel , Apache , Chippewa
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Two giants in 20th-century Native American art, Allan Houser (19141994) and George Morrison (19192000), are being honored in a lead inaugural exhibition at the brand-new National Museum of the American Indian. "Native Modernism: The Art of George Morrison and Allan Houser" will open Sept. 21, 2004 in Washington, D.C. as one of five major shows at the new facility. The exhibition will display approximately 200 works of art in several media.
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2002 January/February
By Site Editor
| Published 01/1/2002
| Pueblo , Navajo , Hopi , Tlingit , Apache , Tewa , Tohono O'odham , Yaqui , Ak-chin , Salt River Pima-Maricopa , Pima , 2002
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ON THE COVER Three-year-old
Ariana Selina and eight-year-old Philana Selina of the Hopi Tewa Senom
Dancers, here seen sprinkled with corn pollen, have charmed guests at
the annual Heard Museum Fair in Phoenix. Join us in a preview of this
year's 44th fair in March, one of the premier gatherings of Native
artists in the world.
Click on "Full Story" to view entire 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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1995 Winter
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ON THE COVER
Renowned Chiricahua Apache artist Allan Houser with his 82-inch-tall
bronze creation “Prayer Song” at Robert Redford’s Sundance Institute
near Provo, Utah. Photo by Jerry Jacka.
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1994 Winter
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ON THE COVER
Sam Henderson (Weiwaikum) in the bow of f’inequala on her maiden voyage
in Discovery Passage, British Columbia. Photo by David Neel (Fort
Rupert Kwagiutl).
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1993 Fall
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ON THE COVER
Geronimo, played by Wes Studi (Cherokee), leads his band across the
Arizona desert in a new film from Columbia Pictures. On his left is
Ulzana, played by Victor Aaron. Photo by Sam Emerson.
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1991 Summer
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ON THE COVER
Carla Goseyun (White Mountain Apache) stands with her godmother, Phoebe
Cromwell, receiving special blessings and prayers during a traditional
Apache Sunrise Ceremony. Photo by Fred Hirschmann.
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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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1988 Fall
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ON THE COVER
A White Mountain Apache Gan dancer of Arizona. The shape and color of
his crown indicates he represents the mountain spirits of the south.
Story page 8. Photo by Michael Moore.
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1988 Winter
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ON THE COVER
Heather Bekis (Navajo) is kept busy within the hogan during her
kinaalda (Navajo puberty) ceremony. Photo by Monty Roessel (Navajo).
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2005 September/October
By Site Editor
| Published 09/28/2005
| Fetishes , Dance , 2005 , Metis , Diné , Maya , Zuni , Ute , Chippewa , Apache , Anishinaabe , Pueblo , Navajo , Mohawk
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 ON THE COVER
Rulan Tangen (Metis) is one of the stable of high-energy, talented and
ambitious young Native contemporary dancers taking the world’s stages
by storm. Fashions by Marama—Kingi Davis and Tracey Lloydd (Ngapuhi
Tribe, Aotearoa). Photo by Richard Bluecloud Castaneda Salt River Pima. Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.
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2000 April/May
By Site Editor
| Published 04/1/2000
| 2000 , Ute , Luiseño , Kuna , Cree , Apache , Osage , Pueblo , Dakota , Kiowa , Navajo , Mohawk
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ON THE COVERR. Carlos Nakai
From Flagstaff to Vietnam, and canyon rims to international venues,
Navajo/Ute flutist R. Carlos Nakai's 15-year musical journey began from
a chance encounter with a Santa Fe flute vendor. Trained in the field
of education, the three-time NAMMY winner and thrice Grammy-nominated
musician now forges cultural philosophies and new age compositions that
reach all walks of life. Click on "Full Story" to view the complete Table of Contents.
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2004 September/October
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ON THE COVER Welcome Home! The
beautiful new National Museum of the American Indian opens in
Washington, D.C. on Sept. 21, presenting the world with an in-depth
look at the history and ongoing culture, arts and lifeways of the
Native peoples of the Americas. Gracing our cover is a bronze
sculpture—"Reverie"—by Allan Houser, 1981, included in an opening
exhibition (©Anna Marie Houser/photo by Ernest Amoroso)
Click on "Full Story" to view the complete Table of Contents.
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2003 September/October
By Site Editor
| Published 09/1/2003
| 2003 , Zuni , Seminole , Nez Perce , Creek , Chippewa , Apache , Hopi , Pueblo , Navajo , Jewelry/Lapidary
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ON THE COVER Cornelia
Bowannie, leader of the Zuni Olla Maidens, of Zuni Pueblo, New Mexico
proudly displays two of her people's world-famous cultural attributes:
their beautiful handmade pottery and their stunning turquoise jewelry.
The Maidens, ages 13 to 59, travel the U.S and Canada performing
traditional Zuni songs and dances.
Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.
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