The reservation (or reserve in Canada) is a place with multi-layered meanings to contemporary Native People. As editor Gerald McMaster states, the reserve has been both sanctuary and prison. While symbolizing community, home, family and tradition, by its very nature (government imposed confinement) it simultaneously represents repression, poverty, and the social ills that follow. For a reader interested in the Great Plains, or any other region, Reservation X: The Power of Place in Aboriginal Contemporary Art deftly illuminates these complex relationships through the work of seven artists and four authors. The volume\u27s first half is devoted to thought-provoking essays by McMaster, also curator of the exhibition, Paul Chaat Smith, Char...
Justice writes well, and I recall someone\u27s observing once that Sigmund Freud became influential ...
This collection of writings by aboriginal authors, all of whom are academics from a wide range of di...
Primarily derived from a March 2001 conference held in Regina, Saskatchewan, these essays present di...
The reservation (or reserve in Canada) is a place with multi-layered meanings to contemporary Nati...
Hidden in Plain Sight is a book with an unusual agenda: to discuss and publicize the many constructi...
The goal of this project is to consider the works of Gerald McMaster (Cree), an artist, curator and ...
The Tamarind Institute is a well-known and well-respected venue where contemporary artists collabora...
This publication-based on the award-winning reinterpretation and reinstallation in 2000 of the Plain...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
The Minneapolis Institute of Art opened an exhibit in the fall of 1992 titled Visions of the People:...
This catalogue, published on the occasion of the sixth biennial exhibition honoring the 2009 winners...
Review«Place remains a native concept rich with political meaning for North American culture as a wh...
This book examines how representational technologies, including photography and archival material,...
In recent years a number of related academic fields have explored the connections between museums an...
Without Reserve is a set of profiles of nine Native people living in Edmonton, Alberta. Each person\...
Justice writes well, and I recall someone\u27s observing once that Sigmund Freud became influential ...
This collection of writings by aboriginal authors, all of whom are academics from a wide range of di...
Primarily derived from a March 2001 conference held in Regina, Saskatchewan, these essays present di...
The reservation (or reserve in Canada) is a place with multi-layered meanings to contemporary Nati...
Hidden in Plain Sight is a book with an unusual agenda: to discuss and publicize the many constructi...
The goal of this project is to consider the works of Gerald McMaster (Cree), an artist, curator and ...
The Tamarind Institute is a well-known and well-respected venue where contemporary artists collabora...
This publication-based on the award-winning reinterpretation and reinstallation in 2000 of the Plain...
In writing a review for Great Plains Quarterly one is asked to emphasize the book\u27s Great Plains ...
The Minneapolis Institute of Art opened an exhibit in the fall of 1992 titled Visions of the People:...
This catalogue, published on the occasion of the sixth biennial exhibition honoring the 2009 winners...
Review«Place remains a native concept rich with political meaning for North American culture as a wh...
This book examines how representational technologies, including photography and archival material,...
In recent years a number of related academic fields have explored the connections between museums an...
Without Reserve is a set of profiles of nine Native people living in Edmonton, Alberta. Each person\...
Justice writes well, and I recall someone\u27s observing once that Sigmund Freud became influential ...
This collection of writings by aboriginal authors, all of whom are academics from a wide range of di...
Primarily derived from a March 2001 conference held in Regina, Saskatchewan, these essays present di...