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ARTIST GUIDE & SCHEDULE Theme: Gratilude Gratilude
FESTIVAL OF WOODLAND INDIAN ART AND CULTURE Friday-Sunday, August 13-15 Radisson Hotel & Conference Center Green Bay, WI 54313
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dear friends ...old a nd ne w, t ha nk you for j oining u s for t he 1 5 t h A nni versa r y o f t he Woodl a nd I ndia n A r t S how & M a r k et where ou r t hem e is " G r a t it u de".
Wisconsin’s only tribally owned bank. We seek to positively impact your community by providing the best financial solutions customized for your unique situation.
• Personal Loans • Business Banking
WE ARE
B E C AU S E ...
Woodland Indian Art Inc., a nonprofit organization with a volunteer Board of Directors; John, Eric, Loretta, Gabrielle, Kirby, Weeya, Rick, Toni, Dawn, Chris, Lloyd, Aliskwet and Sapatis.
We value Native American artists for their role in preserving our culture and native identity.
WE ARE ON A MISSION To expand the awareness and appreciation of Woodland Indian Arts and Culture through education, events and markets. A N D B E CO M E . . . Nationally and internationally recognized and trusted as the premier destination for Woodland Indian arts and culture.
We value volunteerism as an indicator that individuals want to give back and take pride in their community. We value partnerships and relationships with Tribes, States and communities. Only through collaboration can we succeed and achieve our mission. We value Native American Art as an important component in the economy of Tribal communities.
WIA Board Executive Team —
• Online & Mobile Banking
President Vice President Treasurer Secretary
We stand for your future. Visit us today!
John Breuninger Eric Doxtator Loretta Webster Gabrielle Metoxen
WIA Board Members —
Dawn Reiter, Toni House, Weeya Calif, Rick Calif, Chris Powless, Lloyd Powless, Aliskwet Ellis, Sapatis Menomin
WIASM Administration — WIASM Board of Directors — GREEN BAY 2555 Packerland Dr. (920) 490-7600
2550 W Mason St. (920) 490-7600
KESHENA 201 Hwy 47-55 (715) 994-1500
baybankgb.com
Jessica Quintana (Board Administrator) Bruce King (CFO)
Back row left to right: John L. Breuninger, Eric Doxtator, Gabbie Metoxen, Chris Powless, Lloyd Powless, & Kirby Metoxen. Middle row left to right: Aliskwet Ellis, Toni House, Sapatis Menomin, Rick Calif, Weeya Calif & Dawn Reiter Center front & seated: Loretta Webster
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agenda
agenda
FRIDAY, AUGUST 13, 2021 8am-Noon Artist & Juried Artwork Registration 1-1:15pm 1-5pm
Opening: Thanksgiving Address Art Market open to public
6-8pm Awards Reception, Bear Clan Room Closing : Thanksgiving Address Tickets: $25 Food and refreshments SATURDAY,AUGUST 14, 2021 8:30-9:30am Breakfast with the Artist: Kelly Jackson "Music is Medicine" Tickets: $20 Food and refreshments 10am-5pm
SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2021 8:30-9:30am Breakfast with the Artist: Wade Fernandez Musician Tickets: $20 Food and refreshments
Art Market open, Iroquois Complex
10am-1pm Art Classes: $20 Pottery Making Pete Jones Beaded Baby Moccasin Keychain Sunny Webster Small German Silver Broach Stephanie Muscavich VanEvery 1-2pm Storytelling Weeya Calif
10am-4pm
1-1:30pm
Art Market Open, Iroquois Complex Kelly Jackson
1:30-2pm 2pm 1-4pm
Wade Fernandez Youth Fashion Show Oneida Basket Guild Demonstrations
Silent Auction, Raffle & People's Choice Award
3pm
4pm Close of 2021 Art Market Closing: Thanksgiving Adress Award Payouts will be given on Sunday between 12-2pm.
1:30-4:30pm Art Class: $20 Corn Basket Trio Rae Skenandore Papoose Ornaments Kathryn Footit Scissor Case Holder Wilma Cook Zumpano 1-4pm Oneida Basket Guild Demonstrations 4pm Closing - Thanksgiving Address
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WA N D A A N TO N E THE SAN CARLOS APACHE TRIBE
N E VA C A H I L L
[email protected]
920.217.7692
My priority is to engage youth in honoring who they are. I volunteer my time to teach sewing and designing skills that I have learned the past 50 years. I began sewing when I was a freshman in high school. Many participants of the Woodland Youth fashion show have been Middle School students!! My fashions and designs are familiar items at tribal events throughout Turtle Island. My regalia has been worn at the United Nations, Washington DC and at ceremonies signifying important milestones in the lives of many . I've participated in the Northern Woodland Art Show in Hayward, Eiteljorg Indian Market in Indiana, The Heard Museum and the Pueblo Grande Market in Arizona I have been a consistent artist for the Woodland Indian Art Show-"Yaw'ko! Stan and Loretta for your vision!":
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[email protected]
920.492.1681
ONEIDA NATION OF WISCONSIN
Hello I am Neva Cahill iam a raised beader from Oneida and I love beading I also do loomed bracelets and peyote stitch lanyards steering wheel covers dream catchers I was raised in the south and taught beading at an early age I moved here in 2010 and met some wonderful ladies who taught me the raised beading I want to thank Loretta Webster who was the first beader and teacher I met and brought me into the world of raised beading and all the other wonderful ladies who have taught me what I know and I have taken their teaching and have crested my own style
DONNA CHURCH STOCKBRIDGE-MUNSEE/MOHICAN NATION
Many First Nations communities believe we are all born with gifts from the Creator. I acknowledge all the gifts First Nations artists have developed.
The Door County Library is where Donna "Jeanie" Church learned quite a few of the art skills she has today. A sewer, painter, and crafter who has been creating for others for over 50 years.
*My passion is to give back to youth the knowledge I have been granted to understand. I must create with a good mind, a good heart and strong fire!!
Jeanie is retired and living with her husband on the Stockbridge-Munsee/Mohican reservation in the original stone house her father-in-law built.
[email protected]
715.253.2058
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W I L M A CO O K Z U M PA N O
[email protected]
315.724.5931
ST. REGIS MOHAWK
I am Akwesasne Mohawk, Wolf clan. I am part of the Native Roots Artist Guild since 2012. I have been dabbling in beadwork off and on since my early teens. I used to adorn my traditional attire when I was part of a travel troop (native dancers) during the 60's. Over the last 30 years I have blossomed as a contender in the beadwork field. I combine traditional techniques and patterns but add a bit of modern, to show the progression and fortitude for which these styles have persisted through time and adversity. I have been presenting my artwork at many museums, competing st juried shows, and places such as the NYS Fair, and have been warmly welcomed at all events which includes states: Arizona, Indiana, Wisconsin, Washington DC, and New York. l have had requests to do educational presentations in schools and st historical groups and at these events l bring an age appropriate, mini museum to share my culture and items with the students and people that gather. I also teach beading classes and join with other groups to keep this practice evolving with high quality. Many of the patterns and designs that we use are well over 100 years old and I wish to continue this legacy.
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K AT H R Y N F O OT I T STOCKBRIDGE-MUNSEE/MOHICAN
[email protected]
920.312.0593
Kathryn will tell you she learned everything she knows from her Mom, Jeanie. Not only how to sew and paint, but also how to use the internet. "Never overlook your elders as a source of knowledge." she says, "because they are by far wiser than you think!" Sewing from an early age, Kathryn enjoys adding sentimental components to her handmade garments. Colors, emblems, and special prints are things to consider when making a custom shirt, skirt, or dress for someone to cherish. "My patrons are great. They mean a lot to me, I've sent a part of me home with them in my finished projects."
R I C H A R D CO N Z A L E Z
[email protected]
414.530.6233
ONEIDA NATION OF WISCONSIN
Antler Basketry is comprised of father and son team, Richard (Loliwayntati) and Jason Gonzalez. Both are proud members of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin and come from the Elm and Skenandore matriarchies. Rick and Jason use antlers from White Tail, Mule Deer, Moose, Elk, and Bison to produce unique baskets and sculptures that are individually drilled, woven, and designed. The results are generic and cultural in final presentation.
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PETER JONES ONONDAGA
[email protected]
JENNIFER JORDAN 716.378.9872
After studying at the Institute of American Indian Arts in the 1970s, Peter realized he knew more about Southwestern pottery than his own people's pottery. That realization set him on a journey to research, document, and understand what pot making was in the 1500s. Peter's commitment to learning continues today, along with teaching what he has found over decades of studying this ancient artform. Peter has strived for decades to bring Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) pottery back to life in his home communities where he works within the Six Nations Iroquois communities of the Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk, and Tuscarora people. His pots reflect what was originally made with clay gathered from stream beds and altered with the addition of crushed shell, crushed granitic rock and sand to create a clay body that was useful and durable after it was fired.
[email protected]
920.664.6268
ONEIDA NATION OF WISCONSIN
Jennifer J. Jordan, PhD., is an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin and she has been beading on and off for over 20 years. Jennifer first learned to bead when she was 18 and needed to bead her regalia for the Miss Oneida Pageant. She attributes her love of beadwork to her great aunt the late Josephine Oudenhoven and like her great-aunt she is sharing this art form with the younger members of her family to keep the tradition alive.
www.letmebefrank.com 8
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S T E P H A N I E M U S C AV I TC H VA N E V E R Y ONEIDA NATION OF WISCONSIN
[email protected]
C AT H E R I N E N AG Y M O W R Y
920.562.5472
Stephenie Muscavitch VanEvery is a multimedia artist, Iroquois Potter, and Oneida Language and Culture instructor in Oneida, Wisconsin. She received her B.A. in Education with a concentration in Broadfield Social Studies from Alverno College, 2003. From her youth she began to develop an interest in the arts, specifically tied to her family and Oneida heritage. She learned sewing from her grandmother, Evadna Muscavitch, Corn Husk Doll making from Budgie Manders, Silversmithing and Raised Beadwork from Coleen Bins, and Computer Graphics from Thomas Skenandore. Stephenie continued her education at the University of Wisconsin Green Bay, receiving her Masters Degree in Educational Leadership, 2011. In recent years, she has expanded her artist repertoire, adding Quilting with Dr. Anita Barber, Pottery, mentored by Jennifer Stevens, Pete Jones, Brenda Hill, and Natasha Santiago Smoke, and additional Silverwork Mentorships by Sheldon Gibson and Steven Christjohn. Stephenie has been working on a line of hand built pottery inspired by the esteemed woman, as well as teaching at the Oneida Nation Elementary School. Beyond clay, Stephenie is interested in playing board games with her family, graphic design, storytelling, and attending concerts.
[email protected]
MIAMI TRIBE OF OKLAHOMA
Catherine works in contemporary and traditional styles. Educated with a Bachelors of Fine Arts degree from Indiana University, her contemporary paintings reflect her cultural and spiritual background. Her corn husk dolls have evolved from a lost but not forgotten art form into a viable teaching tool for Miami life styles. Hearing the stories of her ancestors have inspired her to make the dolls. She has been involved in the Miami Indian culture all her life, has served on multiple councils, advisory boards and committees including advisory to the Miami wing in the Eiteljorg Museum. Since I was a child I always loved to draw. My parents were very supportive and encouraged me to seek formal schooling. As I was learning the skills to become an artist I also became more aware of my heritage and began exploring art through my culture. While working for a pay check I always found time to paint and become actively involved with the Miami community. I have found my source of inspiration in the stories, signs, symbols, dreams, elders and ancestors. I love the beauty and kindness of the human spirit and our connectedness to all creation. I hope that my work reflects that same spirit and brings an understanding and healing to all in need. Since 1979 her art career has taken her to Indian art markets, exhibits, workshops, lectures, commissions and artist in residencies. Indigenous Peoples Art Market Ziibiwing Center, Mt. Pleasant, MI Eiteljorg Indian Art Market Indianapolis, IN Mitchell Museum Native American Art Show Evanston, IL Cahokia Mounds Indian Art Market Collinsville, IL Red Earth Indian Art Market Oklahoma City, OK Miami University Art Museum “How the Miami People Live” Oxford, OH
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260.615.8025
Matriarchal Spirits Exhibit Institute for Native American Studies Museum, Washington, CT Out of Tradition Art Exhibit Arts Place, Portland, Indiana Creative Arts Center- One Woman Show Bluffton, IN National Center for Great Lakes Native American Culture – Workshops Portland, IN Little Turtle Waterway commission designs Logansport, IN 11
K R I S T I N A N E Z B E G AY DINÉ (NAVAJO) NATION
[email protected]
R A E Yeh san i sak s S K E N A N D O R E 414.627.2761
My name is Kristina Nez Begay (Dine’). My maternal clan is the Bilagaana. I am born for the Todich’ii’nii. The Bilagaana are my maternal grandparents. The Hashtl’ishnii are my paternal grandparents. I am an Indigenous artist specializing in drums and other sacred tools. I understand the importance of right relationship and creating from a good place. Much care is taken with each material to honor and use in a good way. Making drums is a concentration of mine. Part of my purpose is to move beyond the basic mechanics of the drum making process into something deeper and more meaningful. Deep within each drum, is my prayer to bring healing to all People and Mother Earth. The cultural unrest that rose up was an impetus for me to channel some of my own unsettled emotions and energy into creating something positive. As an activist, I put my values and message into some pieces in the hopes that they would be catalysts to conversations that can lead to better understanding of others cultures. I created many drums that each focused on an issue in Indian Country and the political climate of the global community. Other pieces are centered on an event, a vision, or even a recurring dream in my life. I take what I am getting at the energetic and intuitive level and bring it down to the physical in the form of a drum. This makes it tangible and provides an opportunity for others to see into that visionary experience. The drum then tells a story for others to hear and participate in if they choose.
[email protected]
ONEIDA NATION OF WISCONSIN
Rae is an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin. She is a latecomer to the art of basketry, having only discovered her skills & passion for basket making in 2017. Rae’s baskets are done in both traditional and contemporary styles and made with both traditional and contemporary materials. After taking her first basket class through the Oneida Arts program, Rae joined the Oneida Basket Guild, Twatashe nutslu·nihe (All of Us Make Baskets) and later the Wolf River Basket Guild. Rae has diligently worked to broaden her knowledge and understanding of the techniques & styles used by all weavers. She is using her ever expanding knowledge of basketry to contribute to the development of her own artistic style and expressing that through her baskets. “Through our art, we have the opportunity to preserve, protect, and promote our culture. Being Oneida, I have a natural affinity for Woodland Indian Art. But I enjoy incorporating a variety of techniques & materials. I’ve been honored to learn from a variety of master basket makers working with Black Ash, Sweet Grass, Willow, Cedar, Pine Needles, and Birch”. In addition to the hands-on learning, Rae spends a great deal of time researching historical and contemporary woodland and Iroquois baskets and often combines traditional techniques and styles with modern, readily available materials. Rae entered her first piece into competition in 2019 and has since been awarded the following: 2019 Woodland Indian Art Show and Market Oneida WI First Place, Theme category Native Women
2020 Ganondagan Hodinöhsö:ni’ Art Show Victor NY Honorable Mention (Virtual Show)
2019 Northern Woodland Art Show Hayward WI First Place, Sculpture & Best of Show
2021 Exhibited at the Neville Public Museum “Reviving Traditional Arts of the Oneida” January 9 – June 13, 2021 In the Oneida language, Tetwátlatstá (daydwa-tlats-staa), "We are going over it again.".
2019 Cherokee Art Market Tulsa OK Best of Division Contemporary Basketry & Innovator Award
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920.544.1856
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C H R I S TO P H E R S W E E T HO-CHUNK/OJIBWE
[email protected]
CYNTHIA THOMAS 608.445.4324
My name is Christopher Sweet. Ho-Chunk/ Ojibwe.
[email protected]
920.264.6517
I studied art at the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, N.M.
Cynthia is an Oneida Artist who grew up on the Oneida Reservation in Wisconsin. Creating art with clay is her first passion, but she does enjoy creating traditional sculptural art. Her art is inspired by the Oneida culture, traditions and nature. She is a mother of three sons and a grandmother.
My work is strongly influenced by my Native American heritage and the pride I have for my culture. My stylings are inspired by native traditions and voicing issues that extend throughout Indian country by way of art.
Within the past three years she has studied different pottery techniques under the mentorship of Indigenous pottery artists Richard ZaneSmith and Pete B. Jones. Cynthia currently works as the Oneida Nation High School
Before the pandemic, attending Pow-Wows was a source of inspiration and spiritual connections. I enjoy the different styles of dance & regalia with the brilliant colors in motion. I like to bring that experience of colors and emotion back to the studio where I can transfer my vision onto the canvas.
Art Teacher. She has been teaching Art since 2003. She has a BA in Art and a Master’s degree in Teaching.
I am an enrolled member of the Ho-Chunk Nation.
My work includes abstract, abstract realism to large scale murals.
ONEIDA NATION OF WISCONSIN
At the end of June, 2019 she placed 2nd place in the Sculpture category at the Northern Woodland Indian Art Show. In July of 2016, she won first and second place at the Woodland Indian Art show and Market in Oneida WI, in the Pottery Category. She also placed third in the Sculpture category with a clay sculpture. In 2015 she won first place at the Woodland Indian Art show andMarket in Oneida WI, in the Pottery Category. She also won first in the Theme with a clay sculpture she created of her son SmokeDancing. “When working with clay, the artist has to let the clay speak to them, then the clay will create the vision.” (Cynthia Thomas)
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SUNNY WEBSTERT ONEIDA NATION OF WISCONSIN
BETTY SKENANDORE WILLEMS
[email protected]
708.265.1194
My name is Sunny Webster from the Oneida tribe. I was born and raised in Chicago and I move to Green Bay in 2016. I went to college and received my Bachelors in Fashion Design in 2001. I have loved sewing ever since my first sewing class in college. After many years I have a growing business making costumes and gowns for my Entertainer clientele. I also enjoy creating wearable art pieces using traditional images in contemporary styles. I use many kinds of fabrics, leathers other materials. In 2010 I had the great honor of teaching a sewing class to a group of kids from the PRAA (Puerto Rican Arts Alliance) They ranged from 8 - 16 years old. Not only did I teach them how to create and construct their own designs, but I also taught them about their Indigenous roots of the Taino tribe from Puerto Rico. I am proud to say I am still friends with a few of the students and they have very fond memories of the class.
[email protected]
920.660.5275
ONEIDA NATION OF WISCONSIN
I started beading and sewing when I was three years old, made my first dress when I was five years old. I've been entering Native American Art Shows for about 15 years, winning Best of Show at the Eiteljorg, Indianapolis Indiana, Cherokee Art Show in Catoosa Oklahoma and WIASM in Oneida Wisconsin. I've won several Best of Categories, 1st Place and 2nd and 3rd place awards. I have gotten several grants: First Peoples Fund, South Dakota, Mt. Rushmore, South Dakota, Oneida Arts, Oneida Wisconsin. I have had my own business: Dreams Alive for about 10 years and am kept quit busy with bespoke orders. I also still do a beading circle weekly, even through covid. I just have 5 to 8 people now instead of the 20 to 30 people I used to have before the pandemic struck.
I currently work from home building my brand and am very happy with my career and being my own boss.
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S AYÓ · K L A D. W I L L I A M S ONEIDA NATION OF WISCONSIN
[email protected]
608.695.0261
Resides in Brantford, Ontario, North America
2019 BEST OF SHOW
Ramona Raphael, Lac Courte Oreilles Chippewa
Lifelong beadwork artist and activist Sayó·kla began beading at the age of 8 years old, learning her craft from two men who were well known beaders in WI, Ben Cannon (Oneida Nation of WI) and Gerald Hawpetoss (Menominee Nation, WI), both of whom taught her basic beadwork skills ( tying knots, lazy stitch, daisy chain, and peyote stitches) and cultural traditions- never give up and finish what you start; give away the first item you make-share, be a thankful, hand down to the next generation the good things you have been taught, share freely, do not be wasteful, and be patient. As a young woman, Sayó·kla went to high school in Santa Fe, NM and was influenced by Southwestern art and she entered her first art competition at the Institute of Indian Art- High School Art Competition, where she placed 1st in beadwork-1990. Sayó·kla continued to practice her art which she enjoys and became a full-time beadwork artist in 2013. Sayó·kla is a Women’s Northern Buckskin dancer and while on the powwow trail, began to get requests for powwow regalia, which requires focus, dedication, and specific knowledge of design, to complete full-sets of powwow regalia. Sayo’:kla is a life-long activist and has been involved with the Indigenous Environmental Network (Staff and Board of Directors) since 1999. She travelled to Standing Rock in 2016 and created a resistance line of jewelry and continues to promote the rights of Indigenous Peoples, protection of Mother Earth, and cultural pride/awareness, in her current art work today.
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$20 breakfast
with the artist
Breakfast Menu: L ight and fluffy scrambled eggs with Wisconsin cheddar crisp bacon, grilled sausage links, an array of fresh sliced
cheese and fresh chives, country style breakfast potatoes, hickory smoked seasonal fruit and an assortment of freshly baked muffins and nut breads.
K E L LY J AC K S O N
WA D E F E R N A N D E Z
Kelly Jackson a tribal member of the Lac du Flambeau Band, is a singer, songwriter, philanthropist, a tribal advocate, and of course most importantly, a mother and a grandmother. Her music has gained admiration for its unique flare and remarkable ability to inspire and empower listeners. She composes rhythms that compliment her native roots and lyrical messages that invoke healing, self-empowerment and cultural reflection
Soaring around the world with Menominee Indian Reservation roots, Wade Fernandez (Walks With The Black Wolf ) is a “deeply authentic” multi-award winning international touring artist from the Menominee Nation. Winning numerous awards in many genres, Fernandez’s musical style knows no bounds. Beginning his solo career joining Jackson Browne & the Indigo Girls onstage has led to a long career with over 60 international tours. Both his music and his message is firmly grounded in his Menominee Reservation roots and love for the land, animals, and people. His passion to educate, share music, culture and honor Grandmother Earth is reflected in his international presentations and work in schools (k-college), workshops, with the elderly, the mentally disabled, elders, youth and concerts both rocking and soothing stages from Woodstock 94 to Honor The Earth. During the COVID-19 epidemic Wade became a team leader/community health worker for Creative Health Collective servicing the needs of the Native American community on the ground, through film, and livestreaming.
The most notable addition to her work in music is serving as the co-founder of Spirit of a Woman. A nonprofit organization designed to provide personal and professional development for women and girls. Kelly Jackson and Danielle Yancey launched Indigenous Girls Rock Camp (IGRC). IGRC is a typically a 7-day empowerment music camp for girls ages 8-18 with unique programming that combines music education, performance and leadership development under the direction of professional female music instructors.
SATURDAY, AUGUST 14, 2021 • 8:30-9:30 AM 20
SUNDAY, AUGUST 15, 2021 • 8:30-9:30 AM 21
ONEIDA BASKET GUILD TWATASHEʔNUTSLU·NIHEʔ
Nation building ~ one student at a time
All of Us Make Baskets
SATURDAY & SUNDAY August 14 & 15, 2021
• Bachelor’s and Associate degrees in professional and STEM fields • Academics and student life infused with American Indian culture • Facilities featuring a rich variety of Native art and historical archives • American Indian theater, Menominee and Oneida language, and traditional arts and crafts instruction in credit or continuing education courses Accredited, affordable and open to all, with campuses in Keshena and Green Bay website: www.menominee.edu
Loan Products • Down Payment Assistance for home mortgage • Debt Consolidation • Home Improvement / Rehabilitation • Emergency Consumer • Micro-Business
P.O. Box 116 • Oneida, WI 54155 www.woodlandindianart.com
Any Wisconsin Tribal Members living on or near their reservation within the state of Call us for detailed terms and conditions, competitive interest rates. Wisconsin are eligible to apply for any of our loan Services products. Financial education • Credit counseling available to the public.
• Financial Education • Home Buyer Education • Technical Assistance Services
Offices located in Lac du Flambeau and Oneida
715-588-1600 www.winlf.org
Fern Orie, CEO,
[email protected] Janice St Germaine, Director of Lending and Operations,
[email protected]
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Who do we serve? Pre-college | College | Health Professional Students The mission of the Native American Center for Health Professions (NACHP) is to enhance the recruitment, retention and graduation rates of Native American health professional students and to promote health education, research and community-academic partnerships with Native communities. Native American Center for Health Professions 2133 Health Sciences Learning Center 750 Highland Ave. Madison, WI 53705 (608) 262-7218
[email protected]
We Got You Covered!!
Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner
2040 Airport Drive • Green Bay @uw_nachp Facebook.com/NativeAmerican CenterForHealthProfessions
920-944-9759 24
One Great Location, Two Great Options....
skyworldcoffeeandcustard
2040 Airport Dr Green Bay WI 54313
920-429-3103 noodlebar
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Oneida ESC Group is a proud sponsor of the Woodland Indian Art Show and Market Owned by the Oneida Nation, the Oneida ESC Group of companies are proud to support and honor the traditions of Woodland Indian arts and culture. Our companies are built on the knowledge, creativity, and experience of engineers, scientists, and construction managers working nationwide and around the world toward sustainable environmental solutions.
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yawvko, migwich, pįnągigi, i gweyen, ahee-ih-yeh, nya wen ha
thank you
partners, sponsors and donors
To o ur s uppor ters o f bo t h Wo o dlan d I n dian Ar t, I nc. , and the 2019 Wo o dlan d I n dian Ar t S how & M ar k et.
SPONSORS:
D ON OR S:
Community Fund (Finance) Tourism Museum
2021 Artists of WIAS&M College of Menominee Nation The Indigenous People's Fund of Tides Foundation Norbert & Mary Anne Hill Jennifer Hill-Kelley Lloyd Powless Jenny Webster Loretta & Stan Webster
PAR TNERS:
FIRS IRST NATIONS
DEVE EVELOPMENT INSTITUTE
EDUCATING • ADVOCATING • CAPITALIZING
The Woodland Indian Art, Inc. is proud to work with our partners: • W isconsin Indian Education Association (WIEA) • Native American Tourism of Wisconsin (NATOW) • Great Lakes Indian Fish Wildlife Commission (GLIFWC) • Oneida Airport Hotel Corporation
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