First American Art Magazine No. 6, Spring 2015 | Page 11

is a board member and past president of the Cherokee National Historical Society and served as interim director of the Cherokee Heritage Center (1999–2004). She also serves on the boards of the Oklahoma Humanities Council and Association of Tribal Archives, Libraries, and Museums (ATALM). She has curated art shows at the Center of the American Indian and is an avid collector of Native American art. JEAN MERZ-EDWARDS has studied and taught art history since 2000, when she attended her first art history classes at Hunter College in New York. She recently earned her master’s degree in art history from the University of Oklahoma, where she was awarded a certificate in women’s and gender studies and received the Alice Mary Robertson Award for her scholarship on the life and art of Linda Lomahaftewa (Hopi-Choctaw). Merz-Edwards teaches art history and English at Kansas Wesleyan University in Salina, Kansas. MASON RIDDLE is a critic based in Saint Paul, Minnesota, who writes about visual arts, architecture, and design. She was the director of the former Two Rivers Gallery at the Minneapolis American Indian Center, where she curated multiple exhibitions. Riddle has written about numerous Native artists. Previously, she was the director of the Goldstein Museum of Design and the Minnesota Percent for Art in Public Places program. Riddle holds a master’s degree in art history and museum practice from the University of Minnesota and has taught art history at the college level. MICHAEL SHEYAHSHE (Caddo Nation of Oklahoma) is the author of Native Americans in Comic Books: A Critical Study (McFarland Publishing, 2008). He has also written for Illusions, Trauma Magazine, Native Peoples, and Games for Windows: The Official Magazine. Sheyahshe earned two bachelor of art degrees in Native American studies