Proud Raven, Panting Wolf: Carving Alaska's New Deal Totem Parks

Date & Time

Thursday, June 10
7 PM PT

This event is in the past.

Tickets

FREE admission for all;
made possible by support from
Friends of Native Art

Location

The totem parks of Southeast Alaska rank among the regionʼs most popular tourist destinations, but their cultural and political significance has been largely overlooked. Built by Tlingit and Haida men enrolled in the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) from 1938-1942, the New Deal totem parks emerged from the nexus of federal interest in Indigenous heritage of the United States (after decades of official measures to suppress and even eradicate that heritage) and Tlingit and Haida efforts to assert their cultural prerogatives and aboriginal claims to the Tongass National Forest. This talk considers the complexities of the New Deal program and highlights several poles restored by the CCC.

Virtual Event Information
Join the event via this Zoom link: https://washington.zoom.us/j/97664279263

 

About the presenter

Dr. Emily Moore is associate professor of art history at Colorado State University. Raised in Ketchikan, Alaska, she earned her PhD in the History of Art from the University of California, Berkeley and an MFA in Creative Writing from West Virginia University. Her research with Tlingit and Haida communities in Southeast Alaska has been supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Terra Foundation for American Art, Sealaska Heritage Foundation, and the Bill Holm Center for the Study of Northwest Native Art.

Co-sponsored by Friends of Native Art (FONA) and the Bill Holm Center.