Movement on the Plains: Northern Plains Indian Artists Association
Moving the Body Painting into the Art Gallery: Knowing About and Appreciating Works of Aboriginal Art
"Mr. Dewdney, Chief of the Indian Department"
Historical note:
Mr. Shepherd was a farmer, author and curator of the Western Development Museum, Saskatoon. His papers consist of personal correspondence, 1938-1977, subject files, 1933-1977; books, 1961-1977 and newspapers. Among the subject files are ones on the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the Cypress Hills area, Sioux Indians, and the Western Development Museum. The Books section is mainly about books he wrote.My Breath, My Gravity: My Anishinabe Indexical Opens, Pops and Riffs
Communication, Art and Technology Thesis (M.F.A.)--Simon Fraser University, 2013.
My Journey of Magic Realism
My People, the Sioux
Mzinkojige Waabang / To Carve Tomorrow
Napachie Pootoogook True North
[National Museum of the American Indian: Bears]
[National Museum of the American Indian: Ernest Spybuck, Shawnee Artist]
[National Museum of the American Indian: Navajo Paintings]
National Visions, National Blindness: Canadian Art and Identities in the 1920s
Native American Art
The Native American Fine Art Movement: A Resource Guide
Native American P.O.W. Art from Fort Marion: Matches's Sketchbook
Native Americans and American History
Native Art of [the] Pacific Northwest: Bibliography
Native Artists Helping Our People Endure (HOPE): A Social Capital Analysis of a Grassroots Art Initiative to Address Youth Suicide in an Indigenous Community
The Native Cowboy Art of Brian Seesequasis
Native Images: Images of Great Lakes Indians by Paul Kane, 1845-1848
Native Images: Images of Treaty Negotiations, Annuity Payments and Treaty Days - Treaties 1 to 10
Native Land and Foreign Desire: William Penn's Treaty with the Indians
Native Moderns: American Indian Painting, 1940-1960
Native Noir: Genre and the Politics of Indigenous Representation in Recent American Comics
Native Pop: Bunky Echo-Hawk and Steven Paul Judd Subvert Star Wars
Navajo Sandpaintings: From Religious Act to Commercial Art
Navajo Traditions in the Works of David K. John
Navigating First Nations Identity Through Portraiture, Then and Now
Portraits and accompanying material from virtual exhibition of First Nations people.
Neal Ambrose-Smith: The Artistic Modernity of Indianness
Never Alone: The Art and the People of the Story
The New Generation: A Radical Defiance
A New Inuit Childhood and Home: The Drawings of Annie Pootoogook
Newspaper Artists Impression of Riel and His Followers
Niitsitapi Pi’kssíí (Blackfoot Fancy Beings)
Student guide for art exhibition featuring depictions of animals by Blackfoot artists Ryan Jason Allen Willert and Kalum Teke Dan. Each image is accompanied by a brief description of the animal's territory, habitat, food, and conservation status as well as interesting facts. Includes discussion questions and activities for beginner, intermediate and advanced levels.
Nineteenth Century Images of Native Clergy and Indian Missions
No Beginning, No End: The Sami Speak Up
Noble Savage: Depictions of Native Americans throughout U.S. History
Unit involves students reading and evaluating images by Theodor DeBry, Simon van de Passes, Mathaeus Merian, D.F. Blanchard, George Catlin, John Gast, and Walter Ufer and contemporary photographs.
The North American Indian Reframed: The Photography of Edward S. Curtis in Context with American Art and Visual Culture
North Country: The Making of Minnesota
The North West Rebellion Diary of Lieutenant R.L. Wadmore - Transcribed by David Ross. - 1987.
Northwest Coast Indian Art
Norval Morriseau and Medicine Painting
Norval Morrisseau: Artist as Shaman
Norval Morrisseau: Grandfather of the Woodland Style of Painting
Norval Morrisseau: Life and Work
Norval Morrisseau: Recent Work
Notes on the Historical Source Material in the Ayer Collection on the North American Indian Presented by Edward E. Ayer to the Newberry Library, Chicago.
Historical note:
"In 1911 Edward E. Ayer, a Chicago businessman, presented to The Newberry Library his collection of historical source material relating chiefly to the discovery, exploration and colonization of North America and to the native races of North America, the Hawaiian Islands and the Philippine Islands. It contains at present about 49,000 volumes, bound pamphlets, manuscripts, documents and other accessioned pieces."Nunatsiavummi Sananguagusigisimajangit / Nunatsiavut Art History: Continuity, Resilience, and Transformation in Inuit Art
Ojibway Nature Center Colouring Book
Each picture is introduced with a story which includes words in the Anishinaabemowin (Ojibway) language.