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X-WR-CALDESC:'Hanging out with my friends in quarantine' by Alison Bremner 
 (Tlingit) 2020.\n\nEvent Description\nHow have Native cultures documented 
 the passage of time? And what can we learn from Native art forms about pre
 serving moments that are important to us?\n\nJoin Miranda Belarde-Lewis (Z
 uni/Tlingit)\, assistant professor at the University of Washington’s Infor
 mation School\, for an exploration of the artful documentation of time\, a
 s seen through familiar and less familiar artistic traditions within Nativ
 e communities.\n\nThe documentation of time and major events is not a new 
 phenomenon for Native communities\, who have logged cataclysmic changes fo
 r thousands of years. Temporal documentation includes winter counts from t
 he Plains\, totem and story poles from the Northwest coast\, and pottery f
 rom the Southwest. In addition to these pre-contact forms\, the talk will 
 include current examples of Native art documenting social\, political\, an
 d environmental concerns such as missing and murdered Indigenous women\, t
 he impact of commercial fishing\, and pipeline protests.\n\nDr. Miranda Be
 larde-Lewis (Zuni/Tlingit) is an assistant professor and the inaugural Jil
 l and Joe McKinstry Endowed Faculty Fellow of Native North American Indige
 nous Knowledge at the University of Washington’s Information School. She i
 s also an independent curator who engages public scholarship by working wi
 th tribal\, state\, federal\, and international institutions and organizat
 ions to promote Native artists and their work. Recent exhibitions include 
 Sho Sho Esquiro: Doctrine of Discovery (2021) at the Bill Reid Gallery in 
 Vancouver\, B.C.\, Preston Singletary: Raven and the Box of Daylight (2018
 ) at the Museum of Glass\; Alison Bremner (Marks): One Gray Hair (2017) an
 d Storme Webber | Casino: A Palimpsest (2017) at the Frye Museum in Seattl
 e. Belarde-Lewis holds a B.A. in cultural anthropology from the University
  of Arizona\, an M.A. in museology and a Ph.D. in information science from
  the University of Washington.
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DTSTART:20221106T020000
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RDATE:20231105T020000
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DTSTART:20220313T020000
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DESCRIPTION:'Hanging out with my friends in quarantine' by Alison Bremner (
 Tlingit) 2020.\n\nEvent Description\nHow have Native cultures documented t
 he passage of time? And what can we learn from Native art forms about pres
 erving moments that are important to us?\n\nJoin Miranda Belarde-Lewis (Zu
 ni/Tlingit)\, assistant professor at the University of Washington’s Inform
 ation School\, for an exploration of the artful documentation of time\, as
  seen through familiar and less familiar artistic traditions within Native
  communities.\n\nThe documentation of time and major events is not a new p
 henomenon for Native communities\, who have logged cataclysmic changes for
  thousands of years. Temporal documentation includes winter counts from th
 e Plains\, totem and story poles from the Northwest coast\, and pottery fr
 om the Southwest. In addition to these pre-contact forms\, the talk will i
 nclude current examples of Native art documenting social\, political\, and
  environmental concerns such as missing and murdered Indigenous women\, th
 e impact of commercial fishing\, and pipeline protests.\n\nDr. Miranda Bel
 arde-Lewis (Zuni/Tlingit) is an assistant professor and the inaugural Jill
  and Joe McKinstry Endowed Faculty Fellow of Native North American Indigen
 ous Knowledge at the University of Washington’s Information School. She is
  also an independent curator who engages public scholarship by working wit
 h tribal\, state\, federal\, and international institutions and organizati
 ons to promote Native artists and their work. Recent exhibitions include S
 ho Sho Esquiro: Doctrine of Discovery (2021) at the Bill Reid Gallery in V
 ancouver\, B.C.\, Preston Singletary: Raven and the Box of Daylight (2018)
  at the Museum of Glass\; Alison Bremner (Marks): One Gray Hair (2017) and
  Storme Webber | Casino: A Palimpsest (2017) at the Frye Museum in Seattle
 . Belarde-Lewis holds a B.A. in cultural anthropology from the University 
 of Arizona\, an M.A. in museology and a Ph.D. in information science from 
 the University of Washington.
DTSTART;TZID=America/Anchorage:20230228T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Anchorage:20230228T200000
LOCATION:https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_HO0Vk0xDSaqSLC2vRHh_PA
SUMMARY:ONLINE: The Art of Time: Documenting History through Native Art
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