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She is a Hunkpapa Lakota [3] and Dakota citizen of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. [2] She began making dolls at age four, encouraged by her grandmother, Angeline Holy Bear (Lakota/Dakota). She was also inspired by her aunt Agatha Holy Bear Traversie, a beadworker who also tanned hides, and by Ella Bears Heart, a community member who taught her ...
Alice Blue Legs (July 26, 1925 – January 2, 2003) was a Lakota Sioux craftworker, notable for her quillwork.She received a 1985 National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and was a featured artist for the documentary film Lakota Quillwork—Art and Legend.
The Indian Arts and Crafts Act of 1990 defines "Native American" as being enrolled in either federally recognized tribes or state recognized tribes or "an individual certified as an Indian artisan by an Indian Tribe." [1] This does not include non-Native American artists using Native American themes. Additions to the list need to reference a ...
He frequently lectures at home and abroad and is a published author. In 1989 Amiotte wrote with a chapter about Sioux Arts in the important volume, Illustrated History of the Arts in South Dakota, published during the state's centennial. Amiotte, Arthur (1987). The Lakota Sun Dance - Historical and Contemporary Perspectives, in: Sioux Indian ...
The Aktá Lakota Museum & Cultural Center is a private, non-profit educational and cultural outreach program of St. Joseph's Indian School, Chamberlain, South Dakota, United States. The museum was established in May 1991 to honor and preserve the Lakota culture for the students at St. Joseph’s Indian School and to foster among people who ...
She worked in The Tipi Shop, located in the Sioux Indian Museum, which sold indigenous arts and crafts. Through the shop, Amiotte and other women helped raise funds for the constructions of a new Sioux Indian Museum in 2016. [6] [7] Amiotte died on August 16, 1997, in Gillette WY, [1] and was buried in Mt. Calvary Cemetery, Rapid City, SD. [1]
A Brulé Lakota from Rosebud, Stranger Horse was born outside of Wood, South Dakota in 1890. [2] In 1911, he was taken to Pennsylvania to attend Carlisle Indian Industrial School . [ 3 ] There he received art lessons from Angel De Cora , [ 4 ] the accomplished Ho-Chunk painter, whose philosophy was that Native peoples could both maintain ...
Čhetáŋ Sápa (Black Hawk) [tʃʰɛtə̃ sapa] (c. 1832 – c. 1890) was a medicine man and member of the Sans Arc or Itázipčho band of the Lakota people. [1] He is most known for a series of 76 drawings that were later bound into a ledger book that depicts scenes of Lakota life and rituals.
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