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elle-maija-tailfeathers.com: Elle-Máijá Apiniskim Tailfeathers (born in 1986 [4]) is a Canadian filmmaker, actor, and producer.
Maija Peeples-Bright (née Maija Gegeris; born 1942) [1] [2] is a Latvian-born American and Canadian painter, ceramist, and arts educator. She is known as one of the pioneers of the Funk art movement in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1960s. [3] Maija Peeples-Bright has gone by the names Maija Zack, Maija Woof, Maija Bright, and Maija Peeples.
Maija Dragūne (19 March 1945) is a Latvian graphic artist. She works in graphic art and book illustration , as well as paints watercolours. [ 1 ] Maija Dragūne made a great contribution to the illustration of Latvian books, working on the editions of notable authors: Ojārs Vācietis , Jānis Baltvilks, Vitauts Ļūdēns.
Night Raiders is a 2021 Canadian-New Zealand science fiction dystopian film written and directed by Danis Goulet. [2] Set in a dystopian version of North America in the year 2044, the film centres on Niska (Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers), a Cree woman who joins a resistance movement against the oppressive military government in order to save her daughter. [3]
Maija Grotell was born in Helsinki, Finland. She completed six years of graduate work at the University of Art and Design Helsinki housed in the Ateneum. [3] Grotell supported herself during her graduate career by working as a textile designer and working for the Finnish National Museum.
Maija Johanna Vilkkumaa (born 9 November 1973) is a Finnish pop rock singer-songwriter. Beginning her musical hobbies playing piano at an age before school, Vilkkumaa studied in high school where she and her friends set up the band Tarharyhmä in 1990, which broke up in 1995.
Maija Sofia Isola (15 March 1927 – 3 March 2001) was a Finnish designer of printed textiles, and the creator of over 500 patterns, including Unikko ("Poppy"). The bold, colourful prints she created as the head designer of Marimekko made the Finnish company famous in the 1960s.
Kímmapiiyipitssini: The Meaning of Empathy is a Canadian documentary film, directed by Elle-Máijá Tailfeathers and released in 2021. [1] The film centres on the opioid crisis, and its effects on Tailfeathers' home Kainai Nation community in Alberta.