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Full-Text Articles in Art Practice

Territorializing Indigeneity And Powwow Markets, Blaire Gagnon Feb 2013

Territorializing Indigeneity And Powwow Markets, Blaire Gagnon

Blaire Gagnon

North American powwows are presented by organizers and presumed by society at large to be Native events. Research has rarely considered the processes by which powwows become places or the role of territorialization in that process. This article examines the socio-spatial practices powwow organizing committees employ to construct powwows and their arts and crafts markets as places from undifferentiated space and the responses to these practices. I suggest that powwow committees construct powwow space as a form of sovereign political space from which they can manage relations with multiple constituencies and in which contemporary conceptions of Nativeness are negotiated.


Engendering S2013tatus And Value In The Powwow Art Market, Blaire Gagnon Dec 2012

Engendering S2013tatus And Value In The Powwow Art Market, Blaire Gagnon

Blaire Gagnon

This article examines the relationship between people and objects in the powwow arts and crafts market. Over the past century, the field of Indian art developed a system of valuation that employs the "negative relationship" to create a hierarchy of people, objects, and markets. Central to this system are regimes of value associated with art and commodity. I argue that the presence of the mass-produced makes it possible for artisan-vendors to employ the negative relationship to define, value, and make sustainable the artistic in the powwow market context. Ultimately, this marks artisan-vendors and mass-produced vendors as position-takers with the Indian …


Deep In The Peruvian Amazon, Joe Molinaro Dec 1997

Deep In The Peruvian Amazon, Joe Molinaro

Joe Molinaro

No abstract provided.


Jatun Molino: A Pottery Village In The Upper Amazon Basin, Joe Molinaro Apr 1996

Jatun Molino: A Pottery Village In The Upper Amazon Basin, Joe Molinaro

Joe Molinaro

A video documentary depicting the making and firing of the pottery produced by the women of Jatun Molino, a small, remote village located in the upper Amazon basin region of Ecuador.