First American Art Magazine No. 6, Spring 2015 | Page 10

Contributing Writers ROSEMARY DIAZ (Santa Clara Pueblo) is a freelance writer based in Santa Fe, New Mexico. Her work has been widely published over the last 20 years, appearing in such periodicals as Beadwork, Collector’s Guide, Native Peoples, New Mexico Magazine, North Dakota Quarterly, and Santa Fean. She writes an original, online series, Native Foodways: New Seasons for Indian Country Today Media Network. JOSEPH ERB (Cherokee Nation) is a computer animator, film producer, educator, language technologist, and artist. He earned his MFA degree in sculpture from the University of Pennsylvania. Erb created the first computer animation in the Cherokee language, The Beginning They Told. He has taught Muscogee Creek and Cherokee students how to animate traditional stories. Erb works for the Cherokee Nation Education Service in Tahlequah, Oklahoma. SUZANNE NEWMAN FRICKE, PhD (Ashkenazic- American), wrote her dissertation in art history on 20thcentury Native American pottery at the University of New Mexico. She teaches art history at the Santa Fe University of Art and Design. In 2012, along with Beverly Morris (Aleut) and Charlie James, Fricke co-curated the exhibit Octopus Dreams: Works on Paper by Contemporary Native American Artists, which traveled to six sites in Russia and to 516 ARTS in Albuquerq ue. In 2014, two museums in Russia displayed another show, As We See It: Photography by Contemporary Native American Artists, curated by Dr. Fricke and India Young, who are preparing an accompanying catalogue. She is currently organizing a third show, which will also travel to Russia. REID GÓMEZ, PhD (Navajo Nation), is the Mellon Visiting Assistant Professor of Ethnic Studies at Kalamazoo College. She is currently working on The Navajo Slave Project and finishing her fourth novel. Her work addresses extermination and slavery in the borderlands and bloodlands and language revitalization. LOUIS GRAY (Osage Nation) is the former coordinator of the Primary Residential Treatment Center in the Osage Nation. From 2002 to 2014, he managed Native American Times, a weekly newspaper. Gray has won numerous awards, including the Charles Chibitty Community Service Award, as an individual (2002) and as a member of family (2003); the Williams Companies Diversity Award (2004); Best Straight Dancer in Indian Country (2001), and Best Editorial from the Oklahoma Press Association (1991). SCOTT W. HALE is an adviser and accredited art appraiser for Native American Art Appraisals, Inc., with offices in Los Angeles, Santa Fe, Tulsa, and New York City. He pursued his master’s and doctoral studies at the University of Oklahoma, where he taught in the Native American Studies program and 8 | W W W.F IR S TAM ER I C AN ARTMAG A ZI N E.C OM lectured in the School of Art and Art History. Hale is a former curator of private, corporate, and nonprofit art collections and has written and lectured for several publications and museums. ANNA HOOVER (Unangax̂) earned both her master of arts degree in Native American art history and master of communications degree in Indigenous documentary filmmaking from the University of Washington. She is an artist, curator, filmmaker, educator, and community organizer, based in Anchorage, Alaska. Hoover is the daughter of the widely respected late sculptor John Hoover. KATJA LEHMANN, PhD (German), is a curator, writer, archaeologist, and collector of contemporary Native American art, including Hopi katsinam. She earned her doctoral degree in Egyptology, classics, and European prehistory from Ruprechts-Karls-Universität Heidelberg in 2001 and had multiple museum internships at the Staatliches Museum Ägyptischer Kunst, Munich; Rem Reiss-EngelhornMuseen, Mannheim, and the Egyptian Department of the Boston Museum of Fine Arts. Lehmann served as curator and collections manager at Mitchell Museum of the American Indian in Evanston, Illinois (2006–2008), and editor-atlarge for CNAM Magazine (2013–2014). Beginning in 2009, Lehmann has traveled the world as a Lean Six Sigma Consultant of the Global Marketing Team for the Women’s Health and Cancer Division of Becton Dickinson. HEIDI McKINNON is the executive director of Curators Without Borders, a nonprofit that designs exhibitions and educational programming for international development projects and underserved communities in conjunction with museum partners, government agencies, and NGO partners. She concurrently serves as director of exhibitions and community programs at the Sandy Spring Museum in Maryland. McKinnon’s career focuses on historical memory, human rights, and Indigenous communities in the Americas, to which she brings over a decade of experience in developing collaborative museum exhibitions, at the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of the American Indian, at the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, and independently. MELISSA MELERO (Fallon Paiute-Modoc) is a mixed media artist living in Hungry Valley, Nevada. She is currently a full-time artist and co-founder of the art group Great Basin Native Artists in Reno, Nevada. Melero has a bachelor of fine arts degree from the Institute of American Indian Arts and a bachelor of science degree from Portland State University in Oregon. She exhibits her art throughout the United States. MARY ELLEN MEREDITH (Cherokee Nation) owns Meredith Interests and Noksi Press, a Cherokee-language publishing company based in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. She