Showing posts with label Indigenous Peoples. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indigenous Peoples. Show all posts

NewsFusion | 045

NewsFusion for November 2017

Science...


Design...
Culture...

NewsFusion | 028

NewsFusion for June 2016

Science...


Design...
Culture...

Culture Icon | Áile Jávo

Áile Jávo is President of the Saami Council, an organization established in 1956 to protect and promote Saami rights and interests in the four countries where the Saami are living: Norway, Sweden, Russia and Finland. Jávo is a frequent participant and presenter in events that involve traditional Saami culture and lands, the Arctic, and natural resource policy that affects the Saami people.

Jávo was added to our PISA List in 2014.

>> Twitter: @ailejavo

SeanChron | Korina Emmerich on Project Runway

Deisgn and culture have intersected again. Psyched to see another Native American designer on Project Runway. Korina Emmerich (Puyallup) will be one of 18 designers that start Season 13 of Project Runway.

Ka Hikina O Ka Lā at UH Maui College

Ka Hikina O Ka Lā is a new program at the University of Hawai’i Maui College (UHMC) to provide a learning environment that utilizes modern scientific technology and instruction, complemented with cultural knowledge and practices. The program is a collaboration between the native Hawaiian community, UHMC, and the National Science Foundation (NSF) with the goal of increasing the participation of native Hawaiians in higher education, in particular Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM).

SeanChron | Patricia Michaels on Project Runway Finale

Season 11 of Project Runway has come to a close and although Patricia Michaels, my Future-ish favorite, came in 2nd place I think there were many wins during the finale. First and foremost, there were wins for all of the finalists, they all put on fantastic shows and Michelle Lesniak Franklin, the winner, was a fierce competitor with her female-wolf-on-her-last-hunt inspired creations.

But the other wins that caught my attention were the ones Patricia mentioned throughout the finale episode and across the whole season. Clearly Patricia's success in the competition was a win for her personally but she also talked about how she felt she had succeeded in representing her family and community, the Taos Pueblo located in New Mexico, well throughout the entire competition. She then referenced the role she was able to play in breaking stereotypes of Native Americans more broadly by demonstrating the unique and innovative contributions they make in fashion and many other industries. Add to all that goodness...I was thrilled - THRILLED - when she introduced herself at the Mercedes Benz Fashion Week show in her Tiwa language. She also thanked the audience in Tiwa and later her Mother shared some kind and inspiring words in Tiwa after the competition. That means millions - MILLIONS - of people have heard the Tiwa language for the first time...win, Win, WIN!

Heidi Klum, a clear fan of Patricia's, said many times throughout the season that she's never seen anything like the looks Patricia designed, Nina Garcia noted she has a "gift of creativity", and Zac Posen, also a clear fan, called her show pieces "new and different...its from her soul...its pure". Michael Kors, a guest judge for the finale said:
"When I look at the work that [Patricia] does, WOW...When I looked at that dress, that was this perfect culmination of a modern, easy shape that a girl wants to put on with this incredible mica and horse hair, I love that she took all that and merged that together, its SPECTACTULAR...I don't think we've ever seen that type of attention to artistic detail. Its cool! I think she's thinking outside the box.

I think her little blue dress and bouncy blue hairpiece may become an iconic moment in fashion. Iconic in fashion because: 1. it is a truly original and stunning design and 2. it finally breaks the convention that a Native American aesthetic can only reflect the same stereotypical pieces. Patricia has proven that culture and tradition can be referenced but still be very fashion forward. More importantly, I believe Patricia's hard work, creativity, and grace throughout the competition will become an iconic moment in mainstream media as well by demonstrating the truly original and creative talent that Native artists can bring to design industries.

Futurazzi | Jessica Mauboy on Ellen

Our futurazzi spotted a photo of one of our favorite Future-ish "it girls", Jessica Mauboy, arriving for her appearance on the Ellen show that aired April 18, 2013. Mauboy made several appearances on Ellen while the show was down unda more in Spring 2013 but she was on the show this time to promote her the movie she both starred in and recorded multiple songs on the movie soundtrack for, The Sapphires (which Ellen happens to be a big of). Jess just keeps getting more and more fabulous!

SeanChron | Suddenly-Sámi in Seattle

Serendipity indeed! Yesterday I discovered that a movie I had wanted to see for some time was playing at the Nordic Heritage Museum near my house in Seattle. The film was Suddenly Sámi, a 2009 award-winning documentary/autobiography by Norwegian filmmaker and writer, Ellen-Astri Lundby, that chronicles her exploration into her indigenous Sámi heritage, a fact that her Mother had hidden from her most of her life. It is a story about ancestry, culture, and traditions but also a story about identity and more importantly, self identity. Many themes in Sámi history are similar to other indigenous cultures around the world, such as historical trauma, but some elements are unique to the Sámi. The prospect of Lundby taking on her Sámi identity and heritage is treated with both sensitivity and humor that makes for a very entertaining story.

Below is the trailer for the movie...

First Peoples Worldwide

First Peoples Worldwide is a nonprofit organization based in Fredericksburg, Virginia that focuses on funding local development projects in Indigenous communities all over the world and creating bridges between communities and corporations, governments, academics, NGOs, and investors. The group's history traces back to 1997 when Cherokee economist and social entrepreneur Rebecca Adamson conceptualized the idea as a program of her non-profit First Nations Development Institute. In 2005, Rebecca and her Daughter Neva, launched First Peoples Worldside as a distinct organization. Today, First Peoples Worldwide facilitates the use of traditional Indigenous knowledge in solving today’s challenges, including climate change, food security, medicine, governance and sustainable development.