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    First American Art Magazine
    Home»About Us

    About Us

    Publishing Editor

    America Meredith (Cherokee Nation) is an art writer, critic, visual artist, and independent curator whose community-based curatorial practice spans more than three decades. She earned her MFA degree from the San Francisco Art Institute and taught Native American art history at the Institute of American Indian Arts, Santa Fe Community College, and Cherokee Humanities Course. Based in Norman, Oklahoma, Meredith serves on the Native South journal advisory board.

    Literary Editor

    Matthew Ryan Smith, PhD, is the curator and head of collections at the Glenhyrst Art Gallery, in Brantford, Ontario. Smith is a prolific writer and previously served as a sessional instructor of curatorial studies in the Department of Visual Studies, University of Toronto, Mississauga.

    Board of Advisors

    Miranda Belarde-Lewis, PhD (Zuni/Tlingit), is an assistant professor, the inaugural Jill and Joe McKinstry Endowed Faculty Fellow of Native North American Indigenous Knowledge at the University of Washington’s Information School. She’s also an independent curator who works with artists and tribal, state, federal and international institutions and organizations to promote Native artists and their work | mirandabelardelewis.com

    Roy Boney Jr. (Cherokee Nation) | royboneyart.com

    Emily Haozous, PhD, RN (Chiricahua Fort Sill Apache), is an assistant professor at the University of New Mexico College of Nursing. She received her nursing training and doctoral degree at Yale University. Passionate about American Indian health, she links Indigenous methodologies to intervention research in an effort to improve cancer outcomes in Native people. Dr. Haozous is the granddaughter of Allan Houser, one of the most celebrated American Indian artists of the 20th century and daughter of Bob Haozous, a renowned sculptor | dremilyhaozous.com

    Nadia Jackinsky, PhD (Alutiiq) | LinkedIn

    Linda Lomahaftewa (Hopi/Choctaw) is a painter and printmaker who has exhibited and traveled throughout the world, including recent exhibitions in New Zealand, China, Russia, and England. She teaches studio arts at the Institute of American Indian Arts. She earned her MFA degree from the San Francisco Art Institute.

    Tatiana Lomahaftewa-Singer (Hopi/Choctaw) | LinkedIn

    Leah Mata Fragua (yak titʸu titʸu yak tiłhini Northern Chumash) | leahmata.com

    Anya Montiel, PhD (Mestiza/Tohono O’odham descent) | anyamontiel.wordpress.com

    Denise Neil, PhD (Delaware Tribe/Cherokee Nation) is the executive director of the 45th Infantry Division Museum in Oklahoma City | LinkedIn

    Neebinnaukzhik Southall (Rama Chippewa) | website

    Mary Jo Watson, PhD (Seminole Nation), is Director Emeritus and Regents’ Professor of Art History at the School of Art and Art History of the University of Oklahoma. She earned her BFA in Art History, MLS in Seminole Aesthetics, and PhD in Philosophy from the University of Oklahoma. Watson’s curatorial practice spans decades. She serves on the Seminole Tribal Arts Council and several Native art committees including at the Oklahoma History Center and American Indian Cultural Center and Museum. Dr. Watson developed the current Native Art History Program at the University of Oklahoma | academia.edu

    India Young, PhD, decided, somewhere between her Alaskan home, her New York college education, and peace riots in La Paz, art best expresses activism. She returned to school to learn the practice of sharing her passions. Today, she is a doctoral candidate in art history at the University of New Mexico and an independent curator. Young researches print media, contemporary Indigenous arts, and activist art. Her curatorial pursuits focus on the spaces of interconnection between Indigenous arts and the larger world | academia.edu

    Regional Representatives

    • Great Basin: Melissa Melero-Moose (Northern Paiute/Modoc)
    • Great Plains: Jackie Sevier (Northern Arapaho)
    • Northeast: Kelly Church (Gun Lake Pottawatomi/Ottawa/Ojibwe)
    • Northwest: Nadia Jackinsky-Sethi, PhD (Alutiiq)
    • Southeast: Michole Eldred (Catawba/Eastern Cherokee descent)
    • Southwest: Holly Coonsis (Zuni) and RoseMary Diaz (Santa Clara Pueblo)

    Support

    • Contributing Editor: Stacy Pratt, PhD (Mvskoke) | LinkedIn
    • Advertising Representative: Barbara Harjo | barbara@firstamerican.art
    • Circulation Manager: Amy Bergseth, PhD | LinkedIn
    • Social Media and ArtBeat Newsletter editor: Staci Golar (Welsh/Cornish-American) | LinkedIn

    Contributing Writers

    We are grateful to the talented writers, photographers, designers, and artists making First American Art possible. Some of our regular contributors include:

    • RoseMary Diaz (Santa Clara Tewa)
    • Andrea Ferber, PhD | LinkedIn
    • Suzanne Newman Fricke, PhD | profile
    • Christy Hanson (Diné) | LinkedIn
    • Staci Golar | profile
    • Paul Niemi | Instagram #uptownpaulie
    • Nadia Jackinsky, PhD (Alutiiq) | The CIRI Foundation
    • Ruthanne Johnson | ruthanneisaacjohnson.com
    • Matthew Ryan Smith, PhD | LinkedIn
    • Christopher W. Smith | LinkedIn
    • Thollem | website
    • Yvonne N. Tiger (Seminole/Cherokee/Muscogee) | LinkedIn
    Sustained! at the Denver Art Museum
    "Sustained! The Persistent Genius of Indigenous Art" now on view at the Denver Art Museum
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    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

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    Norman, OK 73072
    (405) 561-7655

    info@firstamerican.art
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