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UP WHERE WE BELONG EXHIBITION – PLANET INDIGENUS

UP WHERE WE BELONG EXHIBITION – PLANET INDIGENUS

Image Source: National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI)

Up Where We Belong: Native Musicians in Popular Culture tells their stories and histories, and provides visitors the opportunity to hear samples by music greats and discover musicians with whom those exceptional musicians collaborated.

This exhibition, on loan from the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian, educates and entertains visitors about artists who inspired the musical greats as well as the contemporary artists who they themselves influenced. Highlights include Native people who have been active participants in contemporary music for nearly a century. Musicians like Russell “Big Chief” Moore (Gila River Indian Community), Rita Coolidge (Cherokee), Buffy Sainte-Marie (Cree), and the group Redbone are a few of the Native performing artists who have had successful careers in popular music. Many have been involved in various forms of popular music—from jazz and blues to folk, country, and rock.

Location:
Woodland Cultural Centre
184 Mohawk Street, Brantford ON

About Planet IndigenUS

We are all from “somewhere”.

Indigenous people trace ancestry back through time immemorial to places of origin; places where they are rooted; and places that brought forth a unique culture, language, spiritual framework and environment.

Since 2004, Planet IndigenUS, in partnership with Brantford, Ontario’s Woodland Cultural Centre, has explored such ancestry and cultures through Indigenous artists. Through a 10-day, international, multidisciplinary arts festivals attended by over 700,000 people – the largest and first Indigenous festival of its kind in 2004, repeated in 2009 and 2012 – Planet IndigenUS has raised public awareness, broken stereotypes and fostered a cross-cultural dialogue between Canadians.

Planet IndigenUS gives prominence to the voices, stories and cultures of Indigenous people that are largely absent from the Canadian narrative, and has since evolved from its original festival format to encompass education, outreach, youth projects, commissions, professional development for artists and their communities and internships throughout Ontario and Canada.

What began as a festival has grown to become the Planet IndigenUS Initiative with year round programming and resource building between festivals. Highlights of the Planet IndigenUS Initiative can be found on this page.

We look forward to seeing you at Planet IndigenUS 2015!

Janis Monture
Artistic Director, Planet IndigenUS
Cultural Engagement and Activation
Harbourfront Centre

Melanie Fernandez
Artistic Producer
Director, Cultural Engagement and Activation
Harbourfront Centre

planetindigenus@harbourfrontcentre.com
woodland-centre.on.ca

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About The Author

MUSKRAT Magazine

MUSKRAT is an on-line Indigenous arts, culture magazine that honours the connection between humans and our traditional ecological knowledge by exhibiting original works and critical commentary. MUSKRAT embraces both rural and urban settings and uses media arts, the Internet, and wireless technology to investigate and disseminate traditional knowledges in ways that inspire their reclamation.

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