mapping indigenous arts leadership in canada
DESCRIPTION
By France TrepanierTRANSCRIPT
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MAPPING INDIGENOUS ARTS LEADERSHIP IN CANADA
Presentation by France TrépanierArts Organisations and Businesses PanelWise Practices in Indigenous Community Development Symposium, September 15, 2012
+INDIGENOUS ARTS: Historical Context
+INDIGENOUS ARTS: Historical Context
“Europeans found art everywhere. In hundreds of flourishing vital cultures, Art was fully integrated with daily life... The First Europeans found hundreds of languages in use - not dialects but languages. And in every language, our Artists created philosophical argument and sacred ceremony, political discourse, fiction and poetry.”
Doreen Jensen, 1992
+INDIGENOUS ARTS: Historical Context
+INDIGENOUS ARTS: Historical Context
“I once hear an elder say that the greatest crime in this land was not that the natives had their language and culture beaten out of them in boarding schools – the great crime was the people who came here did not adopt the culture of the land”
Mike MacDonald, 1998
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ART PRODUCT
ART MARKET
distribution Marketing Sales
ART PRODUCTCreative economy CULTURAL INDUSTRIES
Tourism industry
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ART PROCESS
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INTERDISCIPLINARITY exploration
CRITICAL THINKING
ART PROCESSCultural mediation EXPERIMENTATION
Relationships
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INUIT CIRCUS COMPANY
WISE PRACTICE IN INDIGENOUS ARTS LEADERSHIP
ARTCIRQ
+ARTCIRQ
+ARTCIRQ
+ARTCIRQ
+ARTCIRQ
+ WAPIKONI MOBILEMOBILE AUDIO-VISUAL STUDIO TRAVELLING TO INDIGENOUS COMMUNITIES WISE PRACTICE IN INDIGENOUS
ARTS LEADERSHIP
+ WAPIKONI MOBILE
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Indigenous Nations in Quebec
10 First Nations and the Inuit Nation
55 Aboriginal communities
Half of the Aboriginal population is under 30
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WAPIKONI MOBILE
Fully equipped itinerant audio-visual and music recording studios
2000 participants to film and music workshops
360 musicals creations
450 short films
More than 40 awards in national and international festivals
+WAPIKONI MOBILE
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