Bill Reid was a Haida artist who blended modern aesthetics with Indigenous arts through goldsmithing, jewelry making, writing and more. Throughout his career, he researched Indigenous art ...
The Bill Reid Centre (BRC) Display Space is a small foyer located ... projects that we feature in this space increase awareness of the presence and validity of Indigenous worldviews, and highlight the ...
A new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum reveals how deeply embedded a Native woman’s perspective on our culture might be.
ímesh, meaning "to walk" in Sḵwx̱wú7mesh snichim (Squamish Language), is a mobile app developed by the Bill Reid Centre intended to be ... is to facilitate an embodied experience of the Indigenous art ...
Almost 30 years ago, at the settlement of Papunya, about 155 miles northwest of Alice Springs, the contemporary Aboriginal art movement sprang to life. Aboriginal elders, afraid that their culture ...
Embracing their oral traditions, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples have used art as a medium to pass down their cultural stories, spiritual beliefs, and essential knowledge of the land.
The rock art of Australia is among the oldest, most complex, and fascinating manifestations of human creativity and imagination in the world. Aboriginal people used art to record their experiences, ...
From a troubled teenager to artist of the year, Barkaa is now living her best life, but she still has no interest in making people feel comfortable. The immersive, illuminated 2km trail through ...
[They] are bent on something other than social justice, and I think that is true not only for Indigenous people but for everybody except for a few elites.” Detroit artist Senghor Reid also has ...
The bill - approved on May 30 by the Brazilian Chamber of Deputies - seeks to make profound changes in the demarcation process of indigenous lands, and legitimize the “Temporal Landmark thesis”, ...
A major new arts fellowship will build on booming interest in Australian Indigenous art in Europe and North America, as leading museums and Hollywood collectors spur the growing international market.
From sound healing with didgeridoo to art therapy for disabled people, Aboriginal art is proving a powerful tool for helping Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australians heal the body and mind.