Live Breaking News & Updates on Heidi Brandow

Stay updated with breaking news from Heidi brandow. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.

Native American Fellowship Exhibit at Ucross Foundation – Sheridan Media


The current exhibition at the Ucross Foundation Gallery,  “Marking Time,” is a collection of artwork of the two recent Native American Fellowship recipients, Luzene Hill, and Heidi Brandow. The exhibit is to bring attention, via the art, to missing and abused Native American Women.
             Hill, a multimedia artist best known for her socially engaged conceptual installations and performances, and is an enrolled member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indian.
            Brandow, a multi-disciplinary artist with an active painting, printmaking, and social-engagement. She hails from a long line of Native Hawaiian singers, musicians, and traditional dancers on her mother’s side, and Diné storytellers and medicine people on her father’s side.       ....

United States , Luzene Hill , Heidi Brandow , Sharon Dynak , Ucross Foundation , Ucross Foundation Art Gallery , Institute Of American Indian Arts , Ucross Foundation Gallery , Native American Fellowship , Native American , Eastern Band , Native Hawaiian , American Indian Arts , Ucross President Sharon , Ucross Fellowship , Native American Visual Artists , Sydney Pursel , Iowa Tribe , Brenda Mallory , Cherokee Nation , Ucross Art Gallery , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , ஹெய்டி பிராண்டோ , நிறுவனம் ஆஃப் அமெரிக்கன் இந்தியன் கலைகள் , பூர்வீகம் அமெரிக்கன் கூட்டுறவு , பூர்வீகம் அமெரிக்கன் ,

Podcast addresses 'the elephant on the Plaza'


.... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... ....
‘Unsettled’ podcast producers Diego Medina, left, and Christian Gering, right, with interviewee Artemisio Romero y Carver at the Cross of the Martyrs in Fort Marcy Park. (Courtesy of Alicia Inez Guzmán)
Copyright © 2021 Albuquerque Journal
To paraphrase Walt Whitman, the controversial Soldiers’ Monument obelisk that stood in the center of Santa Fe Plaza for 152 years loomed large and contained multitudes. A time capsule buried beneath it included local newspapers and Masonic artifacts. A plaque on its base once celebrated the heroes who had fallen in battles with “savage Indians” in the New Mexico Territory. Calls for the monument’s removal based on its offensive language and what the obelisk represented date back at least to the 1950s. ....

South Carolina , United States , El Salvador , Las Cruces , New Mexico , San Felipe Pueblo , Institute Of American Indian Arts , New Mexicans , Palma Castro , Alicia Inez Guzm , Johnc Calhoun , Diego Medina , Heidi Brandow , Porter Swentzell , Artemisio Romeroy Carver , Union Protectiva De Santa Fe , Santa Fe Art Institute , Indigenous Peoples Day , Story Map Fellows Christian Gering , Darryl Wellington , Native American Salvadoran , Not From , American Indian Arts , Artemisio Romero , Maps Fellow Heidi , Oga Po Geh ,

Rest in pieces


Photography by Don J. Usner
When Indigenous Peoples’ Day arrived, the sun cast a low, warm light on the obelisk. The Soldiers’ Monument, as it’s officially known, was already looking somewhat besieged as a crowd began to gather around it for a third day of demonstrations. The tip of the 33-foot structure a presence in the Santa Fe Plaza for 152 years had been removed months earlier by contractors in the middle of the night. There was still the vague silhouette of red spray paint marks left by protesters that couldn’t be scrubbed from one of its four sides. And one of the marble tablets at the obelisk’s base was entirely busted. It had once read: “To the heroes who have fallen in the various battles with savage Indians in the territory of New Mexico.” In the 1970s, an Indigenous man chiseled out the word “savage” in broad daylight. In its place, others had written new adjectives like “resilient.” Now, the entire inscription was illegible.  ....

New Mexico , United States , South Carolina , New Zealand General , New Zealand , New Mexicans , Christopher Columbus , Ramon Barela , Alan Webber , Johnc Calhoun , Santa Fe Plaza , Heidi Brandow , George Floyd , Southern Poverty Law Center , Santa Fe Art Institute , Indigenous People Day , Soldier Monument , Three Sisters Collective , Santa Fe Mayor Alan Webber , Navajo Nation , Native American , Darryl Wellington , Black Southerner , Native Hawaiian , Southern Poverty Law , Indian War ,