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After the Art Boom, What?: Yupik and Inuit Art: A Resurgence
Airo Wear Promoting Language With Style
Artists, Weavers, Movers and Shakers
Batoche Interactive Theatre Proves to be Larger Than Life
Bazaar Artist: Felicia Huarsaya Vilasante Weaving Futures by Hand
Bazaar Artist: Making Art Out of Wire -- Bernard Domingo
Bazaar Artists: Project Have Hope — Investing in Women and the Future of Uganda
Big River Launches Marketing Co-op
Canadian Indian Art and Industries: An Economic Problem of To-day - G.H. Raley. - Article. - 6 September 1935.
Carvingstone, the Foundation of a Northern Economy
Charles Gimpel: Early Promotion of Inuit Art in Europe
Clippings re: Edgar Mapletoft
Decolonizing the Runway: Jessica R. Metcalfe Brings Native American Fashion Into the Spotlight
The Discovery of Inuit Art: James A. Houston - Animateur
Drawing and Printmaking at Holman
Enabling Women to Live the Life They Choose: Women’s Work
Entrepreneur Gets Hand Up From Dragons
Introduction to Quemeez, a handmade baby moccasin-making company, and the entrepreneurial story behind them.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.20.
Entrepreneurship in Coral Harbour, Nunavut: A Study of Enterprise in Rankin Inlet, Nunavut Where Subsistence Self-Employment Meets Formal Entrepreneurship
The Eskimo Art Business
The Eskimos and 'Airport Art'
Faking It: The Appropriation of a Culture
First Nation's Historical Centre for Tourism and Education
Discusses the First Nation owned and operated Chief Poundmaker Historical Centre and Tee-Pee Village which is open to welcome history buffs, campers, and community groups.
Entire issue on one pdf. To view article scroll to p. 18 of the special insert Windspeaker's Guide to Indian Country.
Frazer's Museum: Storehouse Of History
From Producers to Consumers: Cultural Workers from Siberia Come to Canada to Learn about Inuit Art
From This Native Land: Towards a 'New Understanding' of Brian Jungen's Nike Masks and the Cultural Implications of Bricolage
The History of Beads
In Retrospect
In Retrospect
Inuit Art and the Limits of Authenticity
The Inuit Art Foundation
The Language of Inuit Art
Marketing Inuit Art: Notes from the Nunavut Arts Festival in Iqaluit, September 2-9
Métis Trappers and Hide Working
Mukluks and Moccasins: A Manitoba Success Story
Looks at two Métis entrepreneurs whose company, Manitoba Mukluks, employs 50 Aboriginal workers and sells their product worldwide.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.30.
A New Strategy for Developing Inuit Arts: Encouraging and Disappointing
No "Demon" Carvings From Baker Lake Arts and Crafts Centre ... Yet
Northern Cultural Workers: Exploring Issues of Common Interest
Peter Murdoch: Pioneer of the Nunavik Co-op Movement
Promotion and Marketing
Qopakualuk Talks About Carvings and Co-ops
Rankin Inlet: From Mining Town to Commercial Centre
Remembering Saumik: James Houston 1921-2005
The Sahara's Indigenous Peoples, the Tuareg, Fear Environmental Catastrophe
Sanajatsarq: Reactions, Productions, and the Transformation of Promotional Practice
The Shifting Phases of a Commodity: Textiles and Ethnic Tourism on a Lake Titicaca Island
Sisters Work to Put Native in Graduations
Brief profile of Muskawa Designs, a Saskatoon based business that designs graduation gowns and endeavors to incorporate Native flair in its creations.
Entire issue on one pdf. To access article scroll to p.27.