Print, Red Dress Special, Art Exhibit, Downtown Library, Art and Dance at the Powwow, Ann Arbor District Library, 343 S Fifth Ave, March 27, 2024 Photographer: Steve Jensen
Year:
2024
Copyright
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Print, Red Dress Special, Art Exhibit, Downtown Library, Art and Dance at the Powwow, Ann Arbor District Library, 343 S Fifth Ave, March 27, 2024 Photographer: Steve Jensen
Year:
2024
Copyright
Creative Commons (Attribution, Non-Commercial, Share-alike)
Print, Visualizing Erasure and Disappearance, Art Exhibit, Downtown Library, Art and Dance at the Powwow, Ann Arbor District Library, 343 S Fifth Ave, March 27, 2024 Photographer: Steve Jensen
Year:
2024
Copyright
Creative Commons (Attribution, Non-Commercial, Share-alike)
Print, Visualizing Erasure and Disappearance, Art Exhibit, Downtown Library, Art and Dance at the Powwow, Ann Arbor District Library, 343 S Fifth Ave, March 27, 2024 Photographer: Steve Jensen
Year:
2024
Copyright
Creative Commons (Attribution, Non-Commercial, Share-alike)
Dance for Mother Earth Ann Arbor Pow Wow, Art Exhibit, Downtown Library, Art and Dance at the Powwow, Ann Arbor District Library, 343 S Fifth Ave, March 27, 2024 Photographer: Steve Jensen
Year:
2024
Copyright
Creative Commons (Attribution, Non-Commercial, Share-alike)
Stonehorse Goeman Dances at Huron High School for the 8th Annual Dance for Mother Earth Powwow, April 1980 Photographer: Deborah Ouellette
Year:
1980
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, April 13, 1980
Caption:
JOYFUL — About 200 Native American Indians came from cities, towns and reservations around the Midwest and Canada to Ann Arbor Saturday to "make a joyful noise" and leave their troubles outside. Indian dancers and musicians gathered at Huron High School Saturday for the eighth annual all-Indian Powwow sponsored by the University of Michigan Native American Student Association. The powwow resumes today from 1 to 6 p.m. Several Midwestern tribes are represented at the meeting, according to Ben Bearskin Sr., organizer of the open powwow. The powwow is a happy celebration, a time to forget grudges, to overlook ailments and feel joy, Bearskin said. Above, Stone Horse Goeman, from Big Fork, Minn., performs a native dance Saturday. A children's dance was held Saturday, along with preliminaries of the adult dance competition. Finals of the adult contest were scheduled for Sunday afternoon. The dance competition begins at 2 p.m. today.
Ann Arbor News, April 13, 1980
Caption:
JOYFUL — About 200 Native American Indians came from cities, towns and reservations around the Midwest and Canada to Ann Arbor Saturday to "make a joyful noise" and leave their troubles outside. Indian dancers and musicians gathered at Huron High School Saturday for the eighth annual all-Indian Powwow sponsored by the University of Michigan Native American Student Association. The powwow resumes today from 1 to 6 p.m. Several Midwestern tribes are represented at the meeting, according to Ben Bearskin Sr., organizer of the open powwow. The powwow is a happy celebration, a time to forget grudges, to overlook ailments and feel joy, Bearskin said. Above, Stone Horse Goeman, from Big Fork, Minn., performs a native dance Saturday. A children's dance was held Saturday, along with preliminaries of the adult dance competition. Finals of the adult contest were scheduled for Sunday afternoon. The dance competition begins at 2 p.m. today.
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