Arts & Entertainment
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DENVER—Two contemporary Native artists will challenge 2021 visitors to the Denver Art Museum (DAM) to think of art as a verb rather than a noun.
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- By Monica Whitepigeon
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SAN DIEGO — Under San Diego’s Coronado Bridge, about 20 minutes from the US/Mexico border, sits Chicano Park.
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- By Tamara Ikenberg
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An act of nature in South Dakota’s Custer State Park has unleashed a stampede of cheeky, cautionary creations.
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- By Tamara Ikenberg
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SANTA FE, N.M.-- The ‘dolls’ depicted in Cara Romero’s First American Girl portrait series are fantastic, and they’re anything but plastic.
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- By Tamara Ikenberg
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LOS ANGELES — What would possess a woman to fashion the face of Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, with thousands of tiny seed beads?
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- By Tamara Ikenberg
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Growing up in the 1970s, artist Ryan Singer (Diné) remembers living on his reservation in Arizona and raising funds for a class field trip to see “Star Wars” when he was four years old. He remembers the long bus ride into town and the sight of the movie theater when they got there, decorated with cardboard cutouts of the picture’s heroes, villains and spaceships. He could barely contain his excitement as he held onto his “Star Wars” cup while John Williams’s triumphant theme music boomed throughout the auditorium, ushered in by those famous yellow words. Thus began his lifelong love of the franchise and the genre it changed forever.
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- By Monica Whitepigeon
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SANDOVAL COUNTY, N.M. –– “Face mask or face fine!”
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- By Tamara Ikenberg
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Back in the 1980s, when video games were young and unwoke, Gen X elementary school students were fed a very one-sided view of westward expansion via the era’s trendy learning game “Oregon Trail.”
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- By Tamara Ikenberg
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OSAGE NATION — With funding in place, “Killers of The Flower Moon,” an upcoming film centered on the decades-old Osage Nation murder cases, is set to begin filming next February near Pawhuska, Okla., home of the Osage Nation.
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- By Native News Online Staff
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NORMAN, Okla. — From online talks to limited receptions, Native curators and artists around the country are finding creative and interactive ways to host art exhibitions during the pandemic.
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- By Monica Whitepigeon