Art of the Rural

Championing Native Rights with Suzan Shown Harjo, Part 2 (5 Plain Questions)

1 h 11 min · 1. Apr. 2026
Episode Championing Native Rights with Suzan Shown Harjo, Part 2 (5 Plain Questions) Cover

Beschreibung

This two-part episode was produced in partnership with5 Plain Questions [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/] and Eleven Warrior Arts. Hosted by Joe Williams [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/about-native], 5 Plain Questions is a podcast that proposes 5 general questions to Native American and Indigenous artists, creators, musicians, writers, movers and shakers, and culture bearers. Suzan Shown Harjo is a Cheyenne citizen of Cheyenne & Arapaho Tribes and Hodulgee Muscogee. She is a six-decade champion for Native rights, Founder and President of the Morning Star Institute, and former Executive Director of the National Congress of the American Indians and Native American Rights Fund. Her poetry has been published widely in several journals and anthologies, including Reinventing the Enemy's Language: Contemporary Native Women's Writings of North America [https://birchbarkbooks.com/products/reinventing-the-enemys-language] and The Remembered Earth: An Anthology of Contemporary Native American Literature [https://www.unmpress.com/9780826305688/the-remembered-earth/]. In Part 2 of this conversation, Suzan continues to reflect on her work in media & journalism and her transition to Native rights advocacy. Throughout this journey, she stresses the importance of representing Native arts & culture on a national level. Suzan also shares more stories and perspectives from her youth, including her involvement in the No Mascots movement. The episode closes out with Suzan’s advice for young folks, a continuation of her ancestors’ and elders’ guidance. Throughout her advocacy work, Suzan has helped win landmark laws, including the American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1979, the National Museum of the American Indian Act of 1989, and the Native American Graves Protection Act of 1990. She has also led campaigns to end Native mascots, helped return over a million acres of Indigenous land, and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2014. She remains a leading voice for Indigenous culture and legal rights. Stay tuned for part 2! Episode Resources * Episode webpage & part 1 [https://artoftherural.org/podcasts/suzan-shown-harjo] * Episode transcript [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1MbQQDe-wjYXa8i-QqdPS17ep0LSipH7jhW5-8jxxjC4/edit?usp=sharing] * 5 Plain Questions website [https://elevenwarriorarts.com] Subscribe to 5 Plain Questions wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/5-plain-questions/id1510487029] and Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/5hNLbrZlEuRCucRV2RIoX9?si=503f46175cfc4242]. Art of the Rural [https://artoftherural.org] is honored to support 5 Plain Questions. We are grateful to individual donors across the country, the Ford Foundation, and Good Chaos for making these conversations possible. Learn more about our work and show your support at artoftherural.org [https://artoftherural.org]

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18 Folgen

Episode Sharing and Supporting Native Creativity with Holly Doll (5 Plain Questions) Cover

Sharing and Supporting Native Creativity with Holly Doll (5 Plain Questions)

This two-part episode was produced in partnership with 5 Plain Questions [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/] and Eleven Warrior Arts. Hosted by Joe Williams [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/about-native], 5 Plain Questions is a podcast that proposes 5 general questions to Native American and Indigenous artists, creators, musicians, writers, movers and shakers, and culture bearers. In this episode, meet Holly Doll.  Holly Doll lives in Bismarck, North Dakota, and is a citizen of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. First and foremost, Holly is an artist. She specializes in Lakota forms of beadwork and quillwork, which her mother started to teach her when she was just two years old. Holly grounds herself with cultural values passed down by her family and applies them to any artistic, cultural, and community work that she does. “Even though we're holding something that's hundreds or thousands of years old, culture is something that lives and breathes. It's okay to leave your mark on it and to move it forward and be okay with it changing with future generations that also participate in it.” In addition to being an artist, Holly wears many professional hats. She has over a decade of experience in arts and cultural nonprofits. Currently, she works in collaboration with The Waterers, a collective of radical disruptors of philanthropy, as a Program Director for Ignite Rural with the Department of Public Transformation, and as Program Manager with Arts Midwest.  Episode Resources * Episode webpage [http://artoftherural.org/podcasts/holly-doll] * Episode transcript [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1QugPBv2sHJ4wFMAY7e-O8HSvRqZ-yrBg1EXrcz9Cs80/edit?usp=sharing] * Holly Doll [https://www.linkedin.com/in/holly-doll-29a911296/] on LinkedIn * The Waterers [http://waterers.org] * Ignite Rural, Department of Public Transformation [https://www.publictransformation.org/igniterural] * Midwest Culture Bearers Award, Arts Midwest [https://artsmidwest.org/get-support/midwest-culture-bearers-award/] *  Association of Tribal Archives, Libraries, & Museums [https://www.atalm.org/] (ATALM) Subscribe to 5 Plain Questions wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/5-plain-questions/id1510487029] and Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/5hNLbrZlEuRCucRV2RIoX9?si=503f46175cfc4242]. Art of the Rural [https://artoftherural.org] is honored to support 5 Plain Questions. We are grateful to individual donors across the country, the Ford Foundation, and Good Chaos for making these conversations possible. Additional support for this podcast is provided by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. Learn more about our work and show your support at artoftherural.org [https://artoftherural.org]

3. Juli 202627 min
Episode Uplifting Two-Spirit Stories and Cultural Healing with Penny Kagigebi (5 Plain Questions) Cover

Uplifting Two-Spirit Stories and Cultural Healing with Penny Kagigebi (5 Plain Questions)

This two-part episode was produced in partnership with5 Plain Questions [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/] and Eleven Warrior Arts. Hosted by Joe Williams [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/about-native], 5 Plain Questions is a podcast that proposes 5 general questions to Native American and Indigenous artists, creators, musicians, writers, movers and shakers, and culture bearers. In this episode, meet Penny Kagigebi. Penny is a Two-Spirit queer artist, curator, and community collaborator. She is Crane Clan from White Earth Nation Ojibwe in northwestern Minnesota. For years, Penny has worked at the intersection of queer activism and cultural healing, teaching and practicing porcupine quillwork and birchbark basketry to continue the lineages of these practices.  Recently, Penny curated Queering Indigeneity [https://mmaa.org/queering-indigeneity/] in collaboration with the Minnesota Museum of American Art. This multi-year, multi-generational project celebrates the vision and diversity of Two-Spirit, Native queer, gender expansive artists in the Upper Midwest. Her work has been shown across the Upper Midwest since 2018, supported by grants from the Region 2 Arts Council Anishinaabe Arts Initiative, the Lake Regions Arts Council, and the Minnesota State Arts Board, and recognized with fellowships like First Peoples Funds Cultural Capital and the Emerging Curators Institute. She also serves as co-vice chair for the Mahnomen Arts Initiative in Mahnomen, Minnesota, quietly doing the patient necessary work for tending culture back to life. Episode Resources * Episode transcript [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1sI_AYfQwEpeRzAnBoyoUAqpMGLdtN3xH88uEdnN2fSc/edit?usp=sharing] * Episode webpage [http://artoftherural.org/podcasts/penny-kagigebi] * Penny Kagigebi’s Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/quill.everlasting.1] & Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/pennykagigebi/] * Queering Indigeneity [https://mmaa.org/queering-indigeneity/] at the Minnesota Museum of American Art * Two-Spirit Stories [https://textilecentermn.org/two-spirit-stories/] at Textile Center (Minneapolis) * Rural-Urban Exchange [https://www.artoftherural.org/initiatives/rural-urban-exchange], an initiative of Art of the Rural * Artists mentioned: * Sadie & Zoe Allen [https://www.instagram.com/lightningstonearts/] * Sharon Day [https://indigenouspeoplestf.org/about-iptf/staff/sharon-m-day-executive-director/] * Chewie Mason [https://www.instagram.com/chewiemonster_101/] * Albert McLeod [https://albertmcleod.com/] * Mel Losh [https://www.firstpeoplesfund.org/community-spirit-award-honorees/mel-losh] * Noah Polk [https://www.instagram.com/p/DRFNVrejzN7/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=NTc4MTIwNjQ2YQ==] * Delia Touché [https://deliatouche.com/] Subscribe to 5 Plain Questions wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/5-plain-questions/id1510487029] and Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/5hNLbrZlEuRCucRV2RIoX9?si=503f46175cfc4242]. Art of the Rural [https://artoftherural.org] is honored to support 5 Plain Questions. We are grateful to individual donors across the country, the Ford Foundation, and Good Chaos for making these conversations possible. Learn more about our work and show your support at artoftherural.org [https://artoftherural.org]

15. Mai 20261 h 25 min
Episode “Get Dirty, Eat Well, and Make Art”: Reflecting on 25 Years of Wormfarm Institute with Donna Neuwirth & Jay Salinas Cover

“Get Dirty, Eat Well, and Make Art”: Reflecting on 25 Years of Wormfarm Institute with Donna Neuwirth & Jay Salinas

Meet Donna Neuwirth and Jay Salinas, co-Founders of Wormfarm Institute, a cross-sector arts and culture organization rooted in Sauk County, Wisconsin, in the heart of the Driftless region of the Upper Midwest. Over thirty years ago, Jay and Donna made a leap of faith, leaving behind Chicago, and the city’s vibrant arts scene, for a forty-acre dairy farm in Wisconsin. Out of this experiment grew one of the most inventive and influential models for artistic, cultural, and agricultural stewardship in rural communities, a way of seeing connections embodied in Wormfarm’s notion of the cultureshed. From this foundation, Jay and Donna built a residency program rooted in the simple, generative idea of invitation – welcoming artists to visit, stay, and pitch in with the labor of a working farm. As we learn in this conversation, all of the work that has garnered Wormfarm such attention and respect continues to be rooted in those relationships and conversations that can be exchanged across a bean row. As we learn, this ethos led to some of the Institute’s most well-known work: the Farm/Art DTour, a ten-day, fifty-mile, self-guided drive across Sauk County, punctuated by temporary art installations, pasture performances, and roadside poetry; and Fermentation Fest, a celebration of the deep connections between food, land, and culture. Across all these efforts, Wormfarm has cultivated a web of cross-sector partnerships that weave together farmers, ecologists, choreographers, sculptors, and community members across the Midwest. This conversation scans from Wormfarm’s history forward into their visions for the future, and what can emerge out of deep attention to place, culture, and ecology – and where those soundings might take all of us. Learn more and support Wormfarm Institute at wormfarminstitute.org [http://wormfarminstitute.org]. Episode Resources * Episode transcript [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Ge-UjcvmsA_lp-tZDKZs3gZAwJhc5n0eWF3bgz5FS_E/edit?usp=sharing] * Wormfarm Institute website [https://www.wormfarminstitute.org/] * The notion of "cultureshed [https://www.wormfarminstitute.org/about/mission]" * Artist Residency Program [https://www.wormfarminstitute.org/programs/artist-residency-program] * Farm/Art DTour [https://www.wormfarminstitute.org/programs/dour-10years] * Fermentation Fest [https://www.wormfarminstitute.org/programs/fermfest] * Hay Rake Ballet [https://www.wormfarminstitute.org/programs/current/hayrake] * Decomposium [https://www.wormfarminstitute.org/programs/current/decomp26] * Aldo Leopold archives [https://www.aldoleopold.org/teach-and-learn/leopold-archives] * Dr. Evermor [https://www.worldofdrevermor.com/] We are grateful to folks across the country who have made tax-deductible contributions to Art of the Rural to make this conversation possible, and to the Ford Foundation and Good Chaos Foundation for their support of Art of the Rural’s media programs.

27. Apr. 20261 h 0 min
Episode Championing Native Rights with Suzan Shown Harjo, Part 2 (5 Plain Questions) Cover

Championing Native Rights with Suzan Shown Harjo, Part 2 (5 Plain Questions)

This two-part episode was produced in partnership with5 Plain Questions [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/] and Eleven Warrior Arts. Hosted by Joe Williams [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/about-native], 5 Plain Questions is a podcast that proposes 5 general questions to Native American and Indigenous artists, creators, musicians, writers, movers and shakers, and culture bearers. Suzan Shown Harjo is a Cheyenne citizen of Cheyenne & Arapaho Tribes and Hodulgee Muscogee. She is a six-decade champion for Native rights, Founder and President of the Morning Star Institute, and former Executive Director of the National Congress of the American Indians and Native American Rights Fund. Her poetry has been published widely in several journals and anthologies, including Reinventing the Enemy's Language: Contemporary Native Women's Writings of North America [https://birchbarkbooks.com/products/reinventing-the-enemys-language] and The Remembered Earth: An Anthology of Contemporary Native American Literature [https://www.unmpress.com/9780826305688/the-remembered-earth/]. In Part 2 of this conversation, Suzan continues to reflect on her work in media & journalism and her transition to Native rights advocacy. Throughout this journey, she stresses the importance of representing Native arts & culture on a national level. Suzan also shares more stories and perspectives from her youth, including her involvement in the No Mascots movement. The episode closes out with Suzan’s advice for young folks, a continuation of her ancestors’ and elders’ guidance. Throughout her advocacy work, Suzan has helped win landmark laws, including the American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1979, the National Museum of the American Indian Act of 1989, and the Native American Graves Protection Act of 1990. She has also led campaigns to end Native mascots, helped return over a million acres of Indigenous land, and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2014. She remains a leading voice for Indigenous culture and legal rights. Stay tuned for part 2! Episode Resources * Episode webpage & part 1 [https://artoftherural.org/podcasts/suzan-shown-harjo] * Episode transcript [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1MbQQDe-wjYXa8i-QqdPS17ep0LSipH7jhW5-8jxxjC4/edit?usp=sharing] * 5 Plain Questions website [https://elevenwarriorarts.com] Subscribe to 5 Plain Questions wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/5-plain-questions/id1510487029] and Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/5hNLbrZlEuRCucRV2RIoX9?si=503f46175cfc4242]. Art of the Rural [https://artoftherural.org] is honored to support 5 Plain Questions. We are grateful to individual donors across the country, the Ford Foundation, and Good Chaos for making these conversations possible. Learn more about our work and show your support at artoftherural.org [https://artoftherural.org]

1. Apr. 20261 h 11 min
Episode Championing Native Rights with Suzan Shown Harjo, Part 1 (5 Plain Questions) Cover

Championing Native Rights with Suzan Shown Harjo, Part 1 (5 Plain Questions)

This two-part episode was produced in partnership with5 Plain Questions [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/] and Eleven Warrior Arts. Hosted by Joe Williams [https://www.elevenwarriorarts.com/about-native], 5 Plain Questions is a podcast that proposes 5 general questions to Native American and Indigenous artists, creators, musicians, writers, movers and shakers, and culture bearers. Suzan Shown Harjo is a Cheyenne citizen of Cheyenne & Arapaho Tribes and Hodulgee Muscogee. She is a six-decade champion for Native rights, Founder and President of the Morning Star Institute, and former Executive Director of the National Congress of the American Indians and Native American Rights Fund. Her poetry has been published widely in several journals and anthologies, including Reinventing the Enemy's Language: Contemporary Native Women's Writings of North America [https://birchbarkbooks.com/products/reinventing-the-enemys-language] and The Remembered Earth: An Anthology of Contemporary Native American Literature [https://www.unmpress.com/9780826305688/the-remembered-earth/]. In Part 1 of this conversation, you will hear about Suzan’s early life, family influences, and the experiences that have shaped her decades-long advocacy work. From her transnational upbringing & education, including in places like Hawaii and Italy, she underscores the presence of shared values across cultures, including intergenerational respect, kinship, and resilience. Her elders’ teachings about tribal treaties and her background in both language arts & journalism influenced and informed her transition to Native advocacy. Throughout her advocacy work, Suzan has helped win landmark laws, including the American Indian Religious Freedom Act of 1979, the National Museum of the American Indian Act of 1989, and the Native American Graves Protection Act of 1990. She has also led campaigns to end Native mascots, helped return over a million acres of Indigenous land, and received the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2014. She remains a leading voice for Indigenous culture and legal rights. Stay tuned for part 2! Episode Resources * Episode webpage [https://artoftherural.org/podcasts/suzan-shown-harjo] * 5 Plain Questions website [https://elevenwarriorarts.com] Subscribe to 5 Plain Questions wherever you get your podcasts, including Apple Podcasts [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/5-plain-questions/id1510487029] and Spotify [https://open.spotify.com/show/5hNLbrZlEuRCucRV2RIoX9?si=503f46175cfc4242]. Art of the Rural [https://artoftherural.org] is honored to support 5 Plain Questions. We are grateful to individual donors across the country, the Ford Foundation, and Good Chaos for making these conversations possible. Learn more about our work and show your support at artoftherural.org [https://artoftherural.org]

20. März 20261 h 23 min