8th Fire Guide for Educators
8th Fire: Indigenous in the City
Aboriginal Culture Viewed Through Urban Aesthetic
Comments on the exhibition Beat Nation, that expresses freedom from oppression.
Pages 1,3 of insert entitled Raven's Eye: Special Providing News from BC & Yukon. Scanning is out of sequence for this section.
Entire issue on one pdf.
Aboriginal Research Resources
Aborigines Day Saskatoon. - 21 June 2003. - Slide.
Historical note:
First proclaimed by the Governor General of Canada on 13 June 1996, June 21st of every year has become a day in the Canadian calendar that presents Aboriginal peoples with a great opportunity to express great pride for their rich diverse cultures with their families, neighbours, friends and visitors.Aborigines Day Saskatoon. - 21 June 2003. - Slides.
Historical note:
First proclaimed by the Governor General of Canada on 13 June 1996, June 21st of every year has become a day in the Canadian calendar that presents Aboriginal peoples with a great opportunity to express great pride for their rich diverse cultures with their families, neighbours, friends and visitors.Across the Great Divide: Jimmie Durham's Subversive (Self) Portraits
Adding Value: Rethinking Late 19th-Century Torres Strait Islander Drawings in Anthropological Inquiry
Áillohaš the Shaman-Poet and His Govadas-Image Drum: A Literary Ecology of Nils-Aslak Valkeapää
[Alena Rosen, Inuit Art, Inuit Voices: The Possibility of a Critical Inuit Art Discourse]
Alex Janvier: Reflections
Alex Janvier's Morning Star: A Metaphor for Canada’s Competing Cultures
All My Relations: Biennale of Sydney 2012
Aluminum Sioux Camps
American Anthropologist. Vol. 105, No. 4, December 2003.
[American Eyes on Aboriginal Art]
The American Indian Art World and the (Re-) Production of the Primitive: Hopi Pottery and Potters
American Indian Arts and Crafts: The Misrepresentation Problem
American Indian Jewelry I: 1,200 Artist Biographies: vol. 5
American Indians and Popular Culture: Volume 2: Literature, Arts, and Resistance
The Anguish of Snails: Native American Folklore in the West
[Anishinabee Colouring Sheets]
Six pages are images from Sacred Feminine and IKWE colouring books.
Annie Pootoogook: Life & Work
Antler Hair Combs
Discusses characteristics of different types of combs and their uses.
Art, Activism and the Creation of Awareness of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls (MMIWG); Walking with Our Sisters, Redress Project
Artifakes, Forgeries, and Misattributions on the Pacific Northwest Coast
Artist Corrine Hunt Mixes Traditional Art with Commercial Viability
Autobiographic Narrative in the Drawings of Napachie and Annie Pootoogook
B.C. First Nations Studies [Textbook]
Balancing History
Created to be used with the article Warp, Weft, Weave: Joining Generations published in vol. 53, Issue, 3, 2020 of British Columbia History magazine. Designed for students in Grades 8 to 12.
Basketmaking Guides and the Appropriation of Indigenous Basketry
The Battle of Cut Knife Hill: Harriet Yellowmud Remembers
Bazaar Artist: Felicia Huarsaya Vilasante Weaving Futures by Hand
Bazaar Artists: Project Have Hope — Investing in Women and the Future of Uganda
A Bead Box of My Own: The Beadwork of Métis Artist Philomene Umpherville
Beauty, Honor, and Tradition: The Legacy of Plains Indian Shirts
Between Lines and Beyond Boundaries: Alootook Ipellie's Entanglements of Space
Examines the work of activist Alootook Ipellie to show how it reflects Inuit perspectives on housing, animals and land.
Beyond True or False?: The Artificial Authenticities of Edward S. Curtis: Responses and Reactions
Brian Jungen
Brian Jungen: Cool, Cooler, Coolest
Bringing It Home: Artists Reconnecting Cultural Heritage with Community
Bullets, Teeth and Photographs: Recognising Indigenous Australians Between the Wars
Button Blanket Math: A Primary Unit, Grade 2
Resource for teaching number, pattern and space/shapes by incorporating images and forms used in First Nations art. Includes black line masters.