ReStoried Archives: Indigenous Art Making and the Boarding Schools
A public conversation with three Indigenous art-makers about creative responses to boarding school histories
Location
Occum Commons, Goldstein Hall
Sponsored by
Native American and Indigenous Studies
Audience
Public
Join us for a public conversation with three Indigenous art makers whose work responds to boarding school histories. These artists explore ways that speculation, witnessing, and story can address and interrupt the intergenerational violence of the boarding schools and can inspire Indigenous community-building and community healing in their aftermath. Speakers: Julia Brave NoiseCat (director, Sugarcane), Christian Nakarado (principle architect, Slow Built Studio), and Abigail Chabitnoy (author of How to Dress a Fish and In the Current Where Drowning is Beautiful)
Location
Occum Commons, Goldstein Hall
Sponsored by
Native American and Indigenous Studies
Audience
Public
