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Art As Activism: How Indigenous Artists Use Their Mediums to Amplify Their Voices with Fawn Douglas

0 Views· 02/02/24
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Fawn Douglas (Las Vegas Paiute Tribe) of Nuwu Art, a Las Vegas-based community hub where families, friends and allies gather to enjoy the cultural arts, will discuss how art can be a valid and powerful form of activism for bringing attention to Indigenous people and the issues that affect them today.

This free, virtual event was a part of MCI's Winter Lecture Series. Titled “Our Voices, Amplified: Indigenous Artistry Today,” the series included both on-site and virtual lecture and workshop opportunities that introduce audiences to innovative and inspiring artists from tribes across the country.

Learn more about programming at MCI: https://mci.org/learn/programming

A 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization established in 1948, the Museum of the Cherokee Indian is one of the longest-operating tribal museums in the country. Located in Cherokee, North Carolina on the Qualla Boundary, the sovereign land of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians and ancestral homelands of all Cherokees, the Museum shares the history, culture, and stories of the Cherokee people through its exhibitions, collections, and programs. Learn more at mci.org.

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