Athabasca University (AU), located in Northern Alberta, Canada, is partnering with Writing on the Ridge (WOTR), an arts organization, to promote wilderness preservation and to raise awareness about one of North America’s few remaining intact wilderness areas - the Muskwa-Kechika Management Area (M-KMA), located in the Northern Rocky Mountains of Canada. Writing on the Ridge (WOTR) has created a program - the Muskwa-Kechika Artist Camp - that provides opportunities for artists to experience the natural history of the M-KMA. The Muskwa-Kechika Artist Camps bring aboriginal and non-aboriginal artists working in a variety of disciplines (visual art, writing, performance art, photography) into the wilderness area. The dialogue the artists be...
Webcast sponsored by Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by Green College. Professor Campbel...
Red Cloud Indian Art Show A Continuum of Native Art Native American art cannot be defined by one aes...
Red Cloud Indian Art Show A Continuum of Native Art Native American art cannot be defined by one aes...
Left to its Arctic isolation for many years, Nunavik, i.e. Northern Quebec, has now become the objec...
This dissertation project serves as an inquiry into Canadian representational practices and discours...
"This exhibition investigates a range of works by Indigenous artists currently living in Alberta dem...
Conservation photography has been practiced since the early 1800’s by photographers who had the tale...
www.wildlandsleague.org The Wildlands League’s mission is to protect wilderness through the establis...
Djelk rangers ran a camp from Kawidji on the edge of the Arnhem Plateau and west of Mankorlod outsta...
In the Arctic, environmental conflicts over land use and the exploitation of natural resources cast ...
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the School of Library, Archi...
This paper details a research project dedicated to honouring Mushkegowuk Creeconcepts of land, envir...
This creative piece of work and writing showcases the work of a woman participant from the community...
The Tursujuq National Park Project (aka Guillaume Delisle-Lac-à-L'Eau Claire) is now in progress. Be...
This creative piece of work and writing showcases the work of a woman participant from the community...
Webcast sponsored by Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by Green College. Professor Campbel...
Red Cloud Indian Art Show A Continuum of Native Art Native American art cannot be defined by one aes...
Red Cloud Indian Art Show A Continuum of Native Art Native American art cannot be defined by one aes...
Left to its Arctic isolation for many years, Nunavik, i.e. Northern Quebec, has now become the objec...
This dissertation project serves as an inquiry into Canadian representational practices and discours...
"This exhibition investigates a range of works by Indigenous artists currently living in Alberta dem...
Conservation photography has been practiced since the early 1800’s by photographers who had the tale...
www.wildlandsleague.org The Wildlands League’s mission is to protect wilderness through the establis...
Djelk rangers ran a camp from Kawidji on the edge of the Arnhem Plateau and west of Mankorlod outsta...
In the Arctic, environmental conflicts over land use and the exploitation of natural resources cast ...
Webcast sponsored by the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by the School of Library, Archi...
This paper details a research project dedicated to honouring Mushkegowuk Creeconcepts of land, envir...
This creative piece of work and writing showcases the work of a woman participant from the community...
The Tursujuq National Park Project (aka Guillaume Delisle-Lac-à-L'Eau Claire) is now in progress. Be...
This creative piece of work and writing showcases the work of a woman participant from the community...
Webcast sponsored by Irving K. Barber Learning Centre and hosted by Green College. Professor Campbel...
Red Cloud Indian Art Show A Continuum of Native Art Native American art cannot be defined by one aes...
Red Cloud Indian Art Show A Continuum of Native Art Native American art cannot be defined by one aes...