[nativestudies-l] Fwd: NPF: Three Film Events in November
Raquel Chapa
raquelchapa at gmail.com
Tue Oct 28 18:18:15 EDT 2008
Three Film Events Sponsored in part by the _Native Peoples Forum_
& the _Center for Multicultural Education and Programs_ at NYU__
_ _
*Margaret Mead Film & Video Festival*
American Museum of Natural History
Central Park West at 79th St, New York, NY 10024
*In the Land of the Head Hunters* <
http://www.amnh.org/programs/mead/2008/films/in-the-land-of-the-head-hunters
>**
Edward S. Curtis 1914
Friday, November 14
7:00 pm;
Discussion with Chief Bill Cranmer and dancer William Wasden, Jr. from the
U'mista Cultural Centre to follow film*.
*
The Kwakw_a_k_a_'wakw who populate Alert Bay, British Columbia, are perhaps
the most studied First Nation peoples in North America. One of the many to
photograph them was American photographer Edward S. Curtis, famed for his
extensive documentation of North American tribes, infamous for posing his
subjects with garb and props not authentic to their culture. In 1914, Curtis
transferred his way of working to the moving image, making this silent-era
melodrama rooted in native myths and embellished by his own romantic ideas.
For the Kwakw_a_k_a_'wakw, who have encountered many anthropologists over
the years, the film now stands as a documentary of the faces of their
ancestors, recorded at a time when their own dances, rituals, and languages
were outlawed by the Canadian government. The Coast Orchestra, a Native
American classical ensemble, will perform the film's original score,
composed by Gilbert and Sullivan collaborator John J. Braham. This
presentation of the newly restored 35mm print, accompanied by a discussion
with Kwakw_a_k_a_'wakw community members, reframes this complex cinematic
landmark. For more information go to http://www.curtisfilm.rutgers.edu
_ _
_Revisiting Franz Boas and the Northwest Coast_
Saturday, November 15: 2:00 pm
In honor of the sesquicentennial of the birth of Franz Boas, the Mead
revisits the culture of the Kwakw_a_k_a_'wakw, possibly the most heavily
studied First Nation peoples. Chief Bill Cranmer and dancer William Wasden,
Jr. from the U'mista Cultural Centre in Alert Bay, British Columbia, along
with AMNH anthropologist Aaron Glass Ph.D., NYU Anthropology, 2006, will
present clips from Glass's /In Search of the Hamat'sa/ (2004) and Chuck
Olin's /Box of Treasures/ (1983), which when viewed together expose the
changing face of anthropological studies and testify to the tenacity of this
culture threatened with extinction.
NYU Ticket *_Discount_*: Call *212-769-5200*
The Association on American Indian Affairs
Hosts the 4th Annual
*Native American Short Film Festival*
*
*Thursday, November 13, 2008
Tribeca Screening Room
375 Greenwich Street
(Between North Moore & Franklin Streets)
New York, NY
6:30 PM
Free to the Public
AAIA is proud to present the following short films showcasing Native
American filmmakers.
This event will be preceded by AAIA's 85th Annual Meeting of the Members.
Films:
_Sikumi_ (On the Ice), written and directed by /Andrew Okpeaha MacLean
(Inupiaq)/. Andrew won the 2008 Jury Prize in Short Filmmaking at the
Sundance Film Festival. Sikumi which was shot in Barrow with an Inupiaq
cast, tells the tale of a hunter who goes out on the ice looking for seal
and inadvertently witnesses a murder.
_Caleb's Legacy_, directed and produced by Raquel Chapa (Lipan
Apache/Yaqui/Cherokee), through the American Experience Reel Indian project.
In 1655 /Caleb Cheeshahteaumuck/, an Aquinnah Wampanoag member, became the
first graduate of Harvard Indian College. Over 300 years later four Native
women at Harvard from different departments and tribes recount their journey
to the prestigious institution and draw inspiration from their remarkable
forerunner.
_Ancestor's Eyes_, directorial debut by award winning screenwriter /Kalani
Queypo/ (Blackfeet/Hawaiian). After getting sick, a young Native American
woman, Willa, returns to her mother's home where they both must come to
terms with her illness. Willa's mother, who had been a long time 'shut in',
begins venturing outside with her camcorder, taping the sunrise and
mountains, bringing the outside world in to the bed ridden Willa.
_In Horse You See Ross_, by /Melissa A. Henry/ (Navajo), explains the very
essence of being a horse.
_American Cowboy_, written, produced and edited by /Cedric (Umatilla) and
Tania Wildbill/. Narrated by William Hurt, this excerpt is about the first
Native American to be inducted to Pendleton Roundup.
This is event will be preceded by our Annual Meeting of the Members.
Phone: 646 234 2129. The Association on American Indian Affairs
--
********************************************************
T. James Matthews, Ph.D. 347 730 6319
Prof. Emeritus Psychol and Neural Science 212 998 7888
Director, Native Peoples Forum
jim.matthews at nyu.edu 917 804 9945
********************************************************
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