Pertains to Indigenous architecture in Canada and how it pertains to reconciliation with examples from Thunder Bay, ONT; Toronto, ONT; Victoria, BC; Vancouver, BC; Hamilton, ONT;
Notes
In Locale : the magazine of the National Trust for Canada, special print issue, 2018/2019, pp. 18-25
Features Stoney Nakoda and other First Nations beadwork pieces held at the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies in the heritage collection - vest, moccasins, dress.
Notes
In Kant in Vlaanderen Filum; Volume 19, Number 3, July August September 2015, p. 14 - 17
Pertains to the history of Nipikaw Pakitik / Tsa-nidza / Banff with focus on Indigenous place names, use, meaning, and the importance of nato-oh-siskoom / minni happa / hot springs - includes interview with Roland Rollinmud
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Our languages live within us - words affect the way we make, do and think. For Indigenous artists, various types of communication don't always translate - to English, or to written or spoken language
Pertains to the efforts by Elder Roland Rollinmud to preserve the tradtional Stoney Nakoda place names in the Bow Valley with the installation of plaques along the Trans-Canada Highway, Highway 1A and Highway 40 with information including name of location, history and cultural significance.
A timeline of historic moments and how life was through out the 70s in the Bow Valley area. Includes photos of shop fronts on Banff Avenue in 1976. Photos of the Canmore mines in 1971. Photo of Peter Fuhrmann. Photos of the Association of Canadian mountain Guides.