News

Hercule Van Wolfwinkle told Newsweek people began asking for art of their pets, "even though it was all a joke, and these portraits were rubbish." ...
Skin sewing, or hide sewing, and bead work are vital art forms in Southeast Alaska’s Lingít culture. Pavlik, who is from ...
Imagine a 19th century one-room adobe building in rural Galisteo. It's a Saturday afternoon, and a crowd has formed outside. Men in cowboy hats and dusty jeans mix with well-heeled art collectors and ...
A recent study conducted by Dr. Ana Paula Motta and her colleagues, in collaboration with the Balanggarra Aboriginal ...
Have you ever gazed at a woven basket, a painted rock, or a beaded garment and felt a strange sense of harmony—like the ...
U.S. Army Lt. John W. Gunnison, then working on a survey of the Great Lakes, wrote a letter to his Mormon friend, Albert ...
Nanook of the North,” in 1922, presented, for the first time, the details of the life of an Inuit family in Alaska.
The Wendigo of Native American lore, the Sphinx of ancient Egypt, the Kraken said to terrorize the ocean — discover these and more of the most riveting mythical creatures.
Arctic Bay is a place of Ski-Doos and quad bikes, big GMC and Ford pick-ups, a toddler being pulled in a milk crate on a ...
In urban Inuit photographer Barry Pottle’s visit to the Rideau Canal, it’s the time of the year when the body of water freezes, creating intricate patterns and colors.
The decline of the island’s ice and increasingly volatile weather have made it hard to maintain some Indigenous traditions.
The Indigenous Liaison Program serves as a bridge between Statistics Canada and First Nations, Métis and Inuit communities and Indigenous organizations. Work in partnership with First Nations, Métis, ...