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2004 January/February
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ON THE COVER Illustrator/pencil
artist and aspiring fashion designer Michelle Dunn (Tohono
O’odham/Creek) of Glendale, Arizona. She exemplifies the talented ranks
of young Native artists who experience their artistic coming-of-age at
the annual Heard Museum Youth Show.
Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.
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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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Northwest Meets Southwest
By Lois Sherr Durbin
| Published 03/1/2001
| Tlingit , Tewa , Pueblo , Navajo , Hopi , Haida , Lifeways , Wood Carving , Jewelry/Lapidary , Cultural Items , May/June
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As Haida Chief Jim Hart and his wife, Rosemary, waited at the Vancouver airport in British Columbia, Canada, last September to greet their guests-a group of Navajo and Pueblo artisans-they were concerned about the rain.
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Dan Namingha
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Artist Dan Namingha is fascinated by passages and passageways, both literal and figurative. Much of his work deals with physical and metaphysical passages and the transitory states between everyday reality and the spirit realm. To Namingha, life is composed of dualities: night and day, darkness and light, the divine and the human, life and death, outside and inside, the underworld and the upper world, positive and negative. These dualities are not inherently good or evil; they simply exist as counterbalances to one another.
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2000 Market Issue
By Site Editor
| Published 08/1/2000
| Santa Fe Indian Market , 2000 , Anasazi , Arapaho , Hohokam , Mashantucket Pequot , Tewa , Luiseño , Cheyenne , Crow , Hopi , Navajo
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ON THE COVER Dan Namingha: Visual Poet Builds Artistic Bridges
"I see myself as a bridge between worlds, trying to find that center
line of balance." Armed with paintbrush, welder or electric guitar,
Hopi/Tewa artist Dan Namingha thrives in the realms of dualities and
passages—night and day, darkness and light, the divine and the human,
life and death, positive and negative.
Click on "Full Story" to see complete Table of Contents.
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1998 Spring
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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.
Click on "full story" below to view table of contents.
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1998 Summer
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ON THE COVER
In the Inupiat hunt of a bowhead whale, Jo Jo Brower is an equal to her
husband, whaling captain Arnold Brower of Barrow, Alaska. She prepares
for the hunt a year in advance, remembering that a bowhead will give
itself to a whaling crew headed by a captain and a wife who work hard,
share with all, treat the flesh with respect and who are humble
Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.
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Where There is No Name for Art
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"In
the Tewa language spoken in the northern pueblos of New Mexico there is
no single word for art, for the making of `art' is not seen as being
any different from any other part of life. In a new book from SAR
Press, children from the pueblos of Santa Clara, San Juan, San
Ildefonso, Tesque and Nambe share their lives in thoughts and images
with the help of their art coach Bruce Hucko."
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1996 Summer
By Site Editor
| Published 06/1/1996
| Textiles/Weaving , Basketry , 1996 , Wounaan , Diné , Comanche , Inca , Oglala , Maya , Tewa , Choctaw , Navajo
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ON THE COVER
“There I am!” Sophia Lovato proclaims proudly of her self-portrait, as
one of a group of Tewa children learning to express themselves through
their artwork.
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1990 Winter
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ON THE COVER
Generations join together in celebration of tradition at Crow Fair in Montana. Photo by John Running.
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1987 Fall
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ON THE COVER
Beverly Takala (Hopi) shares the warmth of her son’s first sunrise on
his 20th day, as part of his traditional Hopi naming ceremony. Photo by
Jerry Jacka.
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2003 July/August
By Site Editor
| Published 07/1/2003
| 2003 , Comanche , Tewa , Sioux , Salt River Pima-Maricopa , Iroquois , Hochunk , Choctaw , Chickasaw , Anishinaabe , Haida , Pueblo , Navajo , Apparel/Fashion
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ON THE COVER Native
American fashion sheds its modest garments in favor of a dazzling
wardrobe of novel apparel, such as this dress in bias-cut silk by
Patricia Michaels (Taos Pueblo). It features Zuni Pueblo dragonfly
designs that illustrate how the insect brought rain to the Earth, with
the short top representing rain clouds and the tie the falling rain.
Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.
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2001 May/June
By Site Editor
| Published 05/1/2001
| Navajo , Hopi , Aleut , Inuit , Iñupiat , Athabascan , Haida , Tlingit , Anishinaabe , Passamaquoddy , Penobscot , Tewa , Micmac , Ojibwe , Tsimshian , Maliseet , Diné , 2001
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ON THE COVER Northwest Meets Southwest Southwestern
Native artists travel to the Pacific Northwest homelands of the Haida
people, and a group of Haida artists travels to the Southwest, to trade
new methods of creating art, forging bonds of friendship and
discovering their common natures.
Click on "Full Story" to view entire Table of Contents.
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