Posts Tagged ‘Henry Real Bird’

The Uqqurmiut arts and crafts centre in Pangnirtung is using this oil stick drawing, "Christmas in the iglu" by Elisapee Ishulutak, to extend Christmas greetings to their friends across the eastern Arctic. (Artwork courtsey of Uqqurmiut, via Nunatsiaq News)
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Above, “Christmas in the iglu” by Elisapee Ishulutak. (Artwork courtsey of Uqqurmiut, via Nunatsiaq News.

Sometimes we feel that Buffalo Post could be a blog solely about art, so many are the supremely gifted people about whom we write. Painters and sculptors, jewelers and quilters, writers and musicians and filmmakers – all entranced us this year. Here are just a few:

JungenBrian Jungen‘s art is not only beautiful and impressive, it’s also a lot of fun. He uses a lot of modern materials – sneakers, anyone? – in contemporary sculptures that reference Native traditions. “Native cultures are living, and shouldn’t be in the Museum of Natural History. . . . It’s good for people to realize native art isn’t just beads and carving,” says Jungen, of the Dunne-za First Nation in British Columbia. Jungen was the first living artist to be featured in a solo show at the Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C. His work has also been featured in London’s Tate Modern and New York’s New Museum as well as the Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal.

You’d think it would be enough that at the age of 25, Josh Marceau‘s photo already hangs on the Wall of Fame in the Native American Research Lab at the University of Montana. Marceau is a doctoral student at UM, pursuing his degree in biomedical science. But he’s also a talented jeweler, and says the two pursuits actually dovetail nicely.

Sherman Alexie

Sherman Alexie

Writer Sherman Alexie seems to be on track to surpass Joyce Carol Oates in terms of productivity. Alexie makes us a little grumpy because he writes superbly in too many genres – adult fiction, young-adult fiction and poety – but we’ve got to get over that because he’s just so good. Besides, he’s passionate on the subject of reading and books: “I think white folks should be ashamed that it’s taking an Indian to save part of their culture,” he says. Alexie’s got a new book, “War Dances,” and of course he won the 2007 National Book Award for Young People’s Literature for his young-adult novel, “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian.” It’s not as though his success comes from bending over backward to please everyone: “If you’re not offending a pretty high percentage of people who read your books, you’re not doing it well enough. … At my public performances, if somebody doesn’t walk out at some point I feel like I haven’t done my job.”

Jereldine Redcorn had already received multiple honors for her pottery, for which she mastered ancient Caddo techniques, although using them sometimes in modern designs. This year, she has one more kudo – First Lady Michelle Obama selected one of Redcorn’s works, “Intertwining Scrolls,” to decorate the White House. Her work is included with pieces by internationally renowned artists such as painters Mark Rothko and Jasper Johns, and ceramic artist Maria Montoya Martinez of the San Ildefonso Pueblo in New Mexico. “Life and unity are universal and timeless,” Redcorn says.

Wes Studi

Wes Studi

The film, “The Only Good Indian,” swept the American Indian Film Festival this year. University of Kansas faculty member Kevin Wilmott won best director, and actors Wes Studi and Winter Fox Frank won best actor and best supporting actor, respectively. The film was based on a script written by KU alumnus Thomas L. Carmody and “The Only Good Indian” was inspired by the early history of Haskell Indian Nations University in Lawrence. It recounts the story of a Kickapoo boy forcibly taken from his family – yes, that would be kidnapping – and sent to boarding school. He later escapes, but is tracked by a bounty hunter – who is Cherokee. Those two are, in turn, pursued by an Indian sheriff. Many of the cast and crew are from the University of Kansas, Haskell, and the nearby Kickapoo Indian Reservation.

And speaking of movies, “New Moon,” the second movie in the “Twlight” teen vampire series got buzz and more buzz for the number of hunky young Native actors taking roles of Quileute tribal members who – in the books and movies – also turn into werewolves.

We could go on – and on and on. There’s Henry Real Bird, Montana’s new poet laureate; poet Joy Harjo; painter Joe Yazzie; basketmaker Julia Parker; quilter Almira Buffalo Bone Jackson – you get the, ahem, picture. We love reading about their work and hope you do, too.

Gwen Florio

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Women move king salmon around the drying racks at a fish camp on the lower Yukon River in Alaska, in this undated photo provided by Kwik'pak Fisheries LLC. (AP)

Women move king salmon around the drying racks at a fish camp on the lower Yukon River in Alaska, in this undated photo provided by Kwik'pak Fisheries LLC. (AP)

King salmon fishing ban hurts Native fishermen
Until recently, fishing provided meaningful income, fed families throughout the year, and kept alive long-held traditions of Yup’ik people and Athabascan Indians. But this year, a total ban on commercial fishing for king salmon on the river in Alaska has strained poor communities and stripped the prized Yukon fish off menus in the lower 48 states, according to this New York Times story. Unprecedented restrictions on subsistence fishing have left freezers and smokehouses half-full and hastened a shift away from a tradition of spending summers at fish camps along the river.

Criticisms of Dine College president spur meeting
The Navajo Times reports here that the Diné College Board of Regents will meet Wednesday to discuss the college’s president, Ferlin Clark. A former program administrator says Clark has created an atmosphere where staff and faculty are afraid of losing their jobs. Former Distance Education Director Mia Kalish – whose position was eliminated this past summer – says 13 people (of a total of 64) resigned or were forced out at the end of the last school year due to Clark’s policies and efforts by him and others to get rid of those who criticized his administration.

Sherman Alexie (AP)

Sherman Alexie (AP)

Sherman Alexie embraces his role as troublemaker
The writer, who is Spokane/Coeur d’Alene, tells the Portland Oregonian, here, that “if you’re not offending a pretty high percentage of people who read your books, you’re not doing it well enough. … I’d just feel terrible if I didn’t displease somebody. At my public performances, if somebody doesn’t walk out at some point I feel like I haven’t done my job.” (Don’t get him started on Amazon’s Kindle device.) He’s about to start a tour for his new book “War Dances,” and is writing the sequel to “The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian,” which won the 2007 National Book Award for young people’s literature.

Henry Real Bird (Billings Gazette)

Henry Real Bird (Billings Gazette)

Henry Real Bird combines writing, riding
Montana’s new poet laureate, who is Crow, was in Billings, Mont., last week to read his poetry and talk about it at a High Plains BookFest program at the Western Heritage Center. “I knew I wanted to be a teacher since I was 10 years old,” he said. “And ride horses.” Now he’ll have a great platform from which to spread his ideas. As poet laureate, his role is to encourage appreciation of poetry and literary life in Montana by giving readings and presentations. It will be a change of pace from his work raising horses on the O-W Ranch in Bighorn County, outside Garryowen. Read more about Real Bird here.

Head of National Indian Gaming Commission resigns

National Indian Gaming Commission chairman Phil Hogen, an Oglala Sioux Tribe member, the Rapid City (S.D.) Journal reports here. Hogen, 64, was appointed chairman by former President George W. Bush in 2002, the longest tenure for any chairman of the agency, which provides federal oversight of the $27 billion Native American gambling industry.

Gwen Florio

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Henry Real Bird (National Folk Festival photo)

Henry Real Bird (National Folk Festival photo)


The editorial page of today’s Billings (Mont.) Gazette features a tribute to Henry Real Bird, who recently became Montana’s third poet laureate, following Greg Pape of Stevensville, whose term had expired.

The editorial details Real Bird’s accomplishments, but what we like most about it is that it also includes one of Real Bird’s poems. Here it is:

“Hoola Hand”
Today as I let go, a hoola hand into the dawn
Among silhouetted horse heads, held by a rope corral
But then, that day was many winters ago
To good horses you are drawn
I have asked that you ride the best
Of beautiful words to create images
Of life’s reflections filled with feelings of reality
Winters many may you ride the best.
As sunlight moved in the wind
Among the shadow of an ash tree
I gave the sweat lodge a drink
In the absence of memory
An ole’ feeling sprouts
In the charred remains of life
It is customary
That I have no doubts
Wishful thoughts and prayers through dreams strive
For peace in our souls
May you ride the best
Through the four different grounds
Upon our sacred mother earth.
Henry Real Bird

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Henry Real Bird at the Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nev., earlier this year. (AP photo)

Henry Real Bird at the Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nev., earlier this year. (AP photo)


Henry Real Bird, a Crow tribal member who is a rancher and former rodeo cowboy, today was named Montana’s poet laureate by Gov. Brian Scwheitzer.

“It is an honor to appoint Henry Real Bird as poet laureate,” the governor said in a release accompanying the announcement. “Our heritage, our lives and our way of life in this great state are often expressed through poetry and the work of Henry Real Bird brings so much of Montana to life. This is a unique opportunity to bring poetry to the people of Montana.”

Here’s what the release has to say about Real Bird:

He has been featured at the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering in Elko, Nevada and has published 12 children’s books, a poetry book, “Where Shadows are Born,” and has an audio compact disc, “Rivers of Horse.” Real Bird has won the Western Heritage Award from the National Cowboy Hall of Fame and was featured in the award-winning docu-mentary “Why the Cowboy Sings.” He has a bachelor’s degree from Montana State University and a master’s degree from Eastern Montana College (now Montana State University – Billings). He is the third Montana Poet Laureate and succeeds Greg Pape, whose term expired. Real Bird and his wife and children live on the O-W Ranch in Big Horn County.

The honor came as Montana celebrates American Indian Heritage Day, being celebrated for the first time after a law passed earlier this year.

The event, to be celebrated on the last Friday in September, will be marked in communities and especially in schools.

“American Indian Heritage Day presents a great opportunity not only for schools to highlight their Indian Education for All activities, but for all Montanans to celebrate the rich cultural history and contemporary issues of American Indian nations who were here long before this place was called Montana,” says state School Superintendent Denise Juneau, who is an enrolled member of the Blackfeet Tribe.

Gwen Florio

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