Delbert Miller ’96 Awarded Artist Trust Fellowship

6145240437_22b50504fd_b

Skokomish Tribal elder Delbert Sm3tcoom Miller ’96, winner of a 2013 Artist Trust Fellowship

Congratulations to Delbert Sm3tcoom Miller ’96, one of three Native American artists in Washington State to receive a 2013 Fellowship from Artist Trust.  Delbert will present his work, “stuxWa?scH3la, Keep the Knowledge and Memories of Our Ancestors Alive,” on January 31st in the Longhouse. The award was in the category of emerging fields & cross-disciplinary arts.

Cross-disciplinary is an excellent description of Delbert Miller. As an Evergreen student, his academic work focused on Sociology and Native American Studies. His resume lists expertise as a chemical dependency professional, a cultural resource specialist, and a Skokomish Tribal Historic Preservation Officer.  Tina Kuckkahn-Miller, Director of Evergreen’s Longhouse Cultural and Educational Center and Delbert’s wife, describes her husband’s many contributions and gifts:

Delbert and his family have been involved with the concept of the Longhouse from the beginning. Delbert was at the Longhouse’s ground breaking, opening, naming, 10-year anniversary and 2009 expansion. He is a frequent lecturer in Evergreen programs, although to date he has not lectured on his art, which is  why this fellowship is special – It allows him to talk about himself as an “artist”: a carver, jewelry-maker, composer, drummer, singer.

It is Delbert’s artistry that this award celebrates – his work as a carver, a maker of traditional objects that sing their own songs within a rich cultural context. Delbert writes:

I carve to maintain the usage and understanding of what our old cultural, traditional and spiritual items are. I carve paddles, canoes, root and clam digging sticks, cedar bark pounding tools, combs, house posts and many other items that are used in traditional Native societies in the Northwest. To have a house post is actually saying “I’m obeying the ancient law, remembering all that I can about the ancient history, songs, village sites, etc. It announces to the world who I am and that I have earned the right to have a shoylus, or house post.

Around campus, we know Delbert as a soft-spoken man with a big smile and a warm, enveloping presence, a singer of prayers and blessings at Evergreen’s most important occasions, a sharer of wisdom, and acreator of sacred space in the midst of a busy world. We look forward to learning more from Delbert, starting with a public presentation in January 2014. Watch this blog for updates.

Faculty Member Naima Lowe Publishes “Thirty-Nine (39) Questions for White People”

19_whitequestionsweb3-300x200

Naima Lowe’s limited edition publication “Thirty-nine (39) Questions for White People.”

Evergreen faculty member Naima Lowe has a new publication that is getting some important attention. The title is “Thirty-Nine (39) Questions for White People,” and those questions can really make a person stop and think.

An artist and filmmaker, Naima recently gave an interview to Salon.com about her latest work and it’s focus on race, privilege, perspective and social context. In a preface to the interview, Salon.com offers this characterization:

Naima Lowe’s “Thirty-Nine (39) Questions for White People,” a book born from observations about her class of predominantly white students, has been generating buzz for the potentially uncomfortable questions it forces its viewers to consider. The project presents 39 simple questions — questions that are all-too-relatable for anyone who identifies as a racial minority — but flips the perspective from the minority back to the majority. Questions like “How do you know you’re white?” and “Do you notice when the last white person leaves the room?” become surprising and almost jarring, forcing white people to think more critically about the experience (and inherent privilege) of being white.

Publisher DangerDot Publishing applauds the work as “a stunning art piece and rare book that insists that readers reflect on the complexity of race, and the privilege to not have to notice it.” The first edition consists of 40 hand letter-pressed copies that sold out quickly. In response to the interest, Naima back at work on a larger run, 2nd Edition, in an alternate format.

In any social context, this is an important conversation. Brava to Naima for asking the questions.

Diversity Note: As of this fall, twenty-five percent (25% -1,085 students) of Evergreen’s student body self identify as students of color. Of that total enrollment number, about 100 students of color attend Evergreen’s Tacoma Program.

Tim Girvin ’75: On the Nature of Work

beauty-story-search_01

The Search for Treasure, from Tim Girvin’s Strategic Branding Blog.

For anyone working in the field of strategic communication, Tim Girvin ’75 is an inspiration. Next time you’re sitting in front of your computer, drained of creative juice, click over to Tim’s Strategic Branding Blog and be inspired.

Here is an excerpt from In the Quest for Light,Being Beauty and the Bearing of Story:

But in the quest for our work –
everything that we do,
it’s a kind of quest for light,
and bearing that light forward.

At the very best, a team of people shines in their work, in the telling of their story –
it’s an uplifting experience;
everyone rises to the wave of momentum in
the team that seeks the upscale rendering of beauty,
truth and the profundity of enhanced experience.

 Each of us looks for betterment;
and many of us
look for beauty.
A moment of light –
the cracking open of discovery
is our own personal treasure finding.
Perhaps, that is the
nature of the work.

Finding treasure.
Magic.
Truth.
Wonder.

That’s where I go,
that’s where I come from.

 TIM

Kathleen Hanna ’91: She’s Still Magic

hannas

Poet, Singer, Feminist Icon – Kathleen Hanna, ’91

In the Seattle Times: a review of the new documentary film about Evergreen’s own Kathleen Hanna, ’91. 

(Excerpt)
Director Sini Anderson’s inspiring documentary, “The Punk Singer,” opens with a spoken-word performance at The Evergreen State College in Olympia by Kathleen Hanna, in which the riot-grrrl pioneer speaks publicly about dealing with abuse in her life. “I am your worst nightmare come to life / I’m the girl you can’t shut up / There’s not a guy big enough to handle this mouth.” It’s a powerful scene that shows just how valiant and determined Hanna is to speak her mind in order to effect change. Read the full review.

Douglas Kahn ’73, Ph.D: Media, Technology, Art, History, Innovation

Douglas Kahn ’73, Ph.D Professor of Media and Innovation at Australia’s University of South Wales.

Meet Douglas Kahn, ’73.  He received a few more degrees after leaving Evergreen: Ph.D. Art History and Theory, M.F.A. Post-studio Art, M.A. Music Composition.

Douglas is  Professor of Media and Innovation at Australia’s University of New South Wales and is listed on the University’s website as an “historian and theoretician of media, media arts, music and sound.” His publication list is staggering, ditto his Wikipedia profile. Facebook tells of an October 2013 meet-up celebrating Douglas’s new book,: “Earth Sound Earth Signal” – a “groundbreaking work that explores the frontiers between technology and nature in the experimental arts of the past 200 years.”

If anyone knows Douglas, or knows how to get in touch with him, please tell him the Evergreen community wishes him continued success. Perhaps he will visit the Pacific Northwest someday. If so, we will invite him to campus to meet with current students in the many fields his experience spans.

In any event, here is another amazing Evergreen Mind to add to your Greener network.

Myra Melford ’81: Pianist, Composer and Guggenheim Fellow

myra

Composer and jazz pianist Myra Melford ’81.

Chicago native and acclaimed musician Myra Melford ’81 discovered her passion for jazz as an undergraduate at Evergreen. According to her web site, she “saw early on that aesthetic expression could both be built from and be a structure for profound emotions.”

A recent article in “Jazz Times” notes: “Upon graduating from Evergreen she studied with Art Lande and Gary Peacock at Seattle’s Cornish College of the Arts, and,..after honing a vocabulary of extended piano techniques, she methodically began to develop a highly personal compositional vision informed by Caribbean rhythms, classical Indian traditions, Sufi mysticism, architecture and Henry Threadgill’s cellular approach to building tunes.”

We could go on here, pasting in quote, excerpts and accolades (“Melford’s intrepid virtuosity is consistently breathtaking…”) but suggest you go directly to her web site and become acquainted with this accomplished Greener.

 

Event notice: Evergreen Celebrates New Book on Lummi Carver Joe Hillaire

For those of you in the Olympia area, please join us on campus December 3  for the inaugural release of the book “A Totem Pole History: the Work of Lummi Carver Joe Hillaire.” The event will be hosted by members of “Creativity and Diversity in American Culture: Art and Narrative in Response to Place,”  The event begins at 3:00 p.m. in Seminar Building Two, Room C1105. Copies of the book will be available for purchase.

Lummi/Haida carver Felix Solomon, editor Gregory Fields, and others associated with the publication will present images and readings from the book and its accompanying video and audio CDs at the event.

Evergreen faculty member Rebecca Chamberlain commented: “The Hillaire family has played a special role in the development of Native arts, culture, and education on our campus. This is a wonderful occasion to let people know about this history.”

Continue reading

Lisa Pearson ’93 at the Crossroads of Art and Literature

Salomon-1-340x225

Published by Lisa Pearson’s Siglio Press: Life? Or Theater? An abbreviated Charlotte Salomon biography

Welcome to the world of Lisa Pearson ’93, a world of books. Books as they once were, as they can be, possibly as they should be.  Exquisite, confounding, seductive, troubling, enchanting books.

Siglio is an independent press dedicated to publishing uncommon books and editions that live at the intersection of art & literature: inimitable, visionary works by renowned as well as little known artists and writers that defy categories and thoroughly engage a reader’s intellect and imagination. Founded in 2008, somewhat prosaically in Lisa’s tiny Los Angeles garage, the press creates books fit for the most discerning aficionados.

Learn about Siglio in Lisa’s essay “On the Small & Contrary,” and on “Affinities,” the Siglio blog.