The Riel Rebellion - A Battery Going to the Front
Riel Rebellion troops in the Touchwood Hills
Robert Davidson: Abstract Impulse; Storyteller: The Art of Roy Henry Vickers
Russel on Indians: Grade Level: 7-12
Lesson plan involves students learning about stereotypes and deciding whether paintings by Charles M. Russell reinforced those stereotypes.
Sámi Shamanism, Fishing Magic and Drum Symbolism
The Saskatchewan rebellion - Newspaper clipping and sketch. - 18 April 1885.
Second of Two Cree Women Who Surrendered at Battleford
See Where it Drifts: The Influence of Aboriginal Art on an Australian Ontology of Painting
Seizing the Sky: Redefining American Art
Self-Portraiture and Commodification in the Work of Huron/Wendt Artist Zacharie Vincent, aka "Le Dernier Huron"
Sentry Box in Prince Albert during Rebellion (some question as to info)
Sioux Chief Whitecap
Speaking of Materials
The Steamer Marquis Poling Off a Shallow in the Saskatchewan - Sketch. - 1885.
The Steamer "Northcote" Running the Gauntlet at Batoche, May 8, 1885
Student Snapshots: An Alternative Approach to the Visual History of American Indian Boarding Schools
Surrender of White Cap's Warriors
"Swing Up the Dead" for Burial at Fish Creek, 1885
Table 576-0001: Aboriginal Peoples Survey, Making Handcrafted Goods by Aboriginal Identity, Age Group and Sex, Population Aged 15 Years and Older, Canada, Provinces and Territories: Occasional
Table 576-0002: Aboriginal Peoples Survey, Making Handcrafted Goods by Age Group and Sex, Inuit Population Aged 15 Years and Over, Canada and Inuit Nunangat: Occasional
Table 576-0003: Aboriginal Peoples Survey, Reasons for Making Handcrafted Goods, by Aboriginal Identity, Age Group and Sex, Population Aged 15 Years and Over, Canada, Provinces and Territories: Occasional
Table 576-0004: Aboriginal Peoples Survey, Reasons for Making Handcrafted Goods, by Age Group and Sex, Inuit Population Aged 15 Years and Over, Canada and Inuit Nunangat: Occasional
Teepees and Trade-marks: Aboriginal Peoples, Stereotypes and Intellectual Property
The Three Men Who Captured Riel in 1885
Through an Indigenous Lens: Understanding Indigenous Masculinity and Street Gang Involvement
Touchstone: Narratives in Contemporary Canadian Inuit Art
Art Thesis (M.A) -- Dalhousie University, 2015.
Traditional Knowledge Background Briefs
Transformation Through Drum Building: A Look at One School's Journey and Learning Through Crafting
Troops enroute to N.W. Rebellion, 1885
The Truth in the Classroom
Unlimited Edition: An Art Historical Framework for Indigenous Artists in Printmaking
Unravelling the Yamaji Imaginings of Alexander Morton and Daisy Bates
Unsettled Borders and Memories: A "Local" Indigenous Perspective on Contemporary Globalization
The Uprising in the Northwest - Sketch. - 25 April 1885.
We Were So Far Away: The Inuit Experience of Residential Schools: Activity Guide
What's the Scoop: Carey Newman and the Witness Blanket
Talk by the creator of large-scale art installation comprised of objects gathered from the sites of residential schools across Canada. Duration: 1:24:11.
White Cap, Sioux Chief
Who Was “Big George”? An Exploration and Critique of Aboriginalist Discourse Within Historical Photographic and Written Texts
Media Culture and the Arts Thesis (PhD) -- Curtin University, 2015
William Bleasdell Cameron and Horse Child
Historical note:
Winnipeg Cavalry at Fort Qu'Appelle, North-West Rebellion, 1885
Witness: Pieces of History
Wm. Scott and T. Pike in front of Humboldt Telegraph Station
Women of Labrador: Frontrunning Inuit Artists: Josephina Kalleo, Garmel Rich, and Nellie Winters
Wounded Carried to the Rear from the Fight at Fish Creek - Sketch. - 16 May 1885
Yamǫ́rıa: The One Who Travels
Yamǫ́rıa was a powerful man who helped the ancient Dene by destroying giant animals, separating animals from humans, and giving laws to enable the people to live together in harmony.
Website contains links to biographies of Dene Elders and recorded stories by them and Dene legends, laws and artwork.
Zareba and Sleeping Soldiers at Batoche
Historical note:
A zareba is an encampment used as a base of attack and defense."The Zareba Batoche, N.W. Rebellion, 1885"
Historical note:
A zareba is a stockade made of bushes: an outdoor enclosure, especially one made of thorn bushes and used as protection around a campsite or village.