Close Menu
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    Indigenous art. Indigenous perspectives.
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn Pinterest
    First American Art Magazine
    • Home
    • About Us
      • Press
      • Distribution
      • Sponsors
      • Contact Us
      • Refund and Returns Policy
    • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
      • Archives
      • FAAM Index
    • Content
      • Articles
      • Blog
      • Reference
        • Acronyms
        • Art Terms
        • Artist and Scholar List: A–F
        • Museums, Galleries, and Other Art Venues
        • Timeline of Indigenous Art History of the Americas
    • Calendar
      • Submit an Event
    • Submissions
      • FAAM Style Guide
    • Advertise
    • Shop
    0 Shopping Cart
    First American Art Magazine
    Home»Web Content»Articles»Stories from the Land Symposium

    Stories from the Land Symposium

    0
    By FAAM Staff on January 2, 2019 Articles, Web Content

    Taking place on March 7 and 8, 2019, the symposium explores diverse perspectives on the interrelationships between Indigenous humanities and the land.

    Schedule

    Smoky Hill Museum
    Smoky Hill Museum, Photo: Devirathod (CC BY-SA 2.0)

    Thursday, March 7, 2019

    5:30 – 6:30 pm, Fellowship Hall at the First United Methodist Church, 122 N. 8th Street, Salina, KS

    “Creative Voices from the Land: Sharing History through Art,” hosted by the Smoky Hill Museum

    Kelly Church (Ottawa/Pottawatomi) presents on Anishinabeg (Potawatomi, Odawa, Ojibwe, and Algonquin) art and America Meredith (Cherokee Nation) presents on art by Indigenous peoples of the Great Plains, hosted by the Smoky Hill Museum. Fellowship Hall | (785) 309-5776 | link

    Friday, March 8, 2019

    Birger Sandzén Memorial Gallery
    401 N. First Street, Lindsborg, Kansas

    9:00 – 9:30 am
    Welcome desk, coffee, mix and mingle for symposium participants

    9:30 – 10:30 am
    Opening blessing by Tony Tiger (Muscogee/Seminole/Sac & Fox)
    Introductory remarks by America Meredith (Cherokee Nation)

    10:30 – 10:45 pm: Brief break

    10:45 am – 12:30 pm
    Panel 1: Art Embodying Culture
    Panel Chair: Norman Akers (Osage), MFA, University of Kansas Art Department Director of Graduate Studies.
    Panelists: Jodi Webster (Ho-Chunk/Potawatomi), Anita Fields (Osage/Muscogee), Micah Wesley (Muscogee/Kiowa)

    12:30 – 1:30 pm: Lunch

    1:30 – 3:00 pm
    Panel 2: The Environment
    Panel Chair: Dr. Daniel Wildcat (Yuchee/Muscogee), co-director of the Haskell Environmental Studies Center
    Panelists: Kelly Church (Ottawa/Pottawatomi), National Heritage Fellow; Alicia Harris, MA (Assiniboine).

    3:00 – 3:15 pm: Brief break

    3:15 – 5:00 pm
    Panel 3, Forming Regional Groups
    Panel Chair: Melissa Melero-Moose (Northern Paiute/Modoc), founder of the Great Basin Artists Group.
    Panelists: Chase Earles (Caddo), Tony Tiger (Muscogee/Seminole/Sac & Fox), and Roy Boney Jr. (Cherokee Nation)

    Tony Tiger artwork
    Artwork by Tony Tiger (Muscogee/Seminole/Sac & Fox)

    5:00 – 7:00 pm
    Stories from the Land gallery reception
    Birger Sandzén Gallery and also the Mingenback Art Center Gallery, Bethany College, 335 E. Swensson Street, Lindsborg, KS
    In conjunction with Maker’s Street Art Walk

    Hotel

    We will be staying at Holiday Inn Salina, 3145 S. 9th Street, Salina, KS 67401 (not to be confused with Holiday Inn Express and Suites at 755 W. Diamond Drive) | (785) 404-6767 | link

    Main page


    We are grateful for the support of Humanities Kansas and the Lindsborg Arts Council in making this exhibition and symposium possible. The views expressed in the Stories from the Land exhibition and during the Stories from the Land symposium are not necessarily those of Humanities Kansas or the National Endowment for the Humanities.

    Humanities Kansas

    Birger Sandzen logo

    first american art magazine
    Smoky Hill Museum

    Related Posts

    Wadulisi Recordings amplifies Native musicians

    November 13, 2025

    Interwoven: Cherokee, Muscogee (Creek), & Yuchi Baskets

    November 5, 2025

    NAASA 2025 Conference

    October 22, 2025
    Peabody Essex Museum: join the 2026 long-term Native American Fellowship program
    Matrilineal Memory by Mikaela Shafer
    Sign up for FAAM Art Beat newsletter
    Sign up for FAAM Art Beat newsletter
    Cherokee Language Publishing
    Indigenous Editors Association
    Indigenous Editors Association
    Mission Statement

    First American Art Magazine, LLC (FAAM), broadens understanding of art by Indigenous peoples of the Americas from tribal communities to the global art world.

    Vision Statement

    First American Art Magazine, LLC, strives to foster historical resilience, cross-cultural understanding, and reintegration of humans into the natural world.

    turtleshell rattle by Tommy Wildcat

    First American Art Magazine's offices are located within the ancestral homelands of the Wichita and Affiliated Tribes and the historic territories of the Muscogee Nation and the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma.

    Contact Us

    First American Art Magazine
    3334 W. Main St. #442
    Norman, OK 73072
    (405) 561-7655

    info@firstamerican.art
    ads@firstamerican.art
    circulation@firstamerican.art

    Site Admin

    © 2025 First American Art Magazine, LLC. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.