Pow wow art exhibit opens Wednesday at Stewart center

Bucky Harjo, Grass Dancer, 2022, digital photograph

Bucky Harjo, Grass Dancer, 2022, digital photograph

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The Stewart Indian School Cultural Center & Museum will display contemporary pow wow dance regalia, photography, mixed media sculpture, Great Basin beadwork, digital graphic design and more starting Wednesday, Oct. 12.
The exhibition, “Dancing for the Earth, Dancing for the People: Pow Wow Regalia and Art of the Great Basin” at the Great Basin Native Artists Gallery, was curated by Melissa Melero-Moose (Fallon Paiute/Modoc), founder of Great Basin Native Artists Collective, according to a news release from Nevada Tourism & Cultural Affairs.
Melero-Moose said in the release the exhibition “seeks to display a small view into the pow wow culture and how contemporary and historical regalia were never 'costumes’ to the Indigenous peoples of this continent.”
“The contemporary pow wow is a social gathering, a competitive dance contest, an art exhibition, a cultural exchange, and so much more,” she added. “Evolving over the years from traditional tribal ceremony, which continues, and grows stronger, the pow wow brings the people together many times each year in healing, dance, drumming and song.”
Participating artists include Phil Buckheart, Bucky Harjo, Linda Eben Jones, Jack Malotte, Lyndah Steele, Theo Steele, Janice Eben Stump, Chad Yellow John, and Bhie-Cie Zahn-Nahtzu.
The exhibition will run through May 26 inside the Stewart Indian School Cultural Center & Museum, 1 Jacobsen Way in Carson City.
The Great Basin Native Artists Gallery’s mission is to gain a better knowledge and awareness of the art and peoples of the Great Basin and to create opportunities for this underrepresented region in all forms of the arts.