Recent Items
Sculptor and hereditary Haida chief James Hart wins one of Canada's top art prizes
The Art Newspaper | November 17, 2021
Exhibition looks at the later, Indigenous-influenced work of Quebec's Riopelle
Vancouver Sun | November 16, 2021
In new memoir, Tomson Highway reveals the secret to his 'utterly positive spirit' — his parents
CBC Radio | November 12, 2021
Lee Maracle, revolutionary Indigenous author and poet, dead at 71
CBC News | November 11, 2021
Haida Nation artist and hereditary chief James Hart wins $100K Audain Prize
Pique News Magazine
Construction set to begin on kihciy askiy, Edmonton's urban Indigenous cultural site
CBC News | November 05, 2021
Katherena Vermette, Tomson Highway and Cherie Dimaline among winners at 2021 Writers' Trust Awards
CBC News | November 03, 2021
Sask. people keeping Indigenous language alive through music, technology and education
CBC News | November 01, 2021
Meet the B.C. artist behind UNBC’s Indigenous athletics logo — a first for Canada
Global News | October 30, 2021
Indigenous thinkers reinvigorate STEM with traditional knowledge
CBC Radio | October 29, 2021
Tomson Highway's memoir, Permanent Astonishment, is written as 'a symphony to life'
CBC News |Books | October 07, 2021
How a day for truth and reconciliation inspired these Indigenous artists
CBC News | September 30, 2021
Digitization and Replication of Cultural Objects
Natural History For Scientists | September 21, 2021
The Rich Tradition of Kwakwaka’wakw Masks
Waddington's | September 7, 2021
The Kwakwaka’wakw peoples (formerly known to many non-Kwakwaka’wakw, as the Kwakiutl) are the traditional Indigenous inhabitants of the coastal areas of northeastern Vancouver Island and adjacent mainland British Columbia, and are especially renowned for their elaborate ceremonial masks.