AMONG EQUALS

Fifty years ago the Professional Native Indian Artists Incorporation (PNIAI) transformed the art world forever. As part of Indigenous activism happening across the Americas in the 1970s, the “Indian Group of 7” (as they were dubbed by the press at the time) asserted First Nations artistic expressions and self-determination in the face of forced assimilation policies. Their goals: encourage other First Nations artists to paint, create space in national and commercial galleries for First Nations art, and inspire youth. From Expo 67 to their groundbreaking exhibition at the Winnipeg Art Gallery and beyond, learn more about the lives and artistic practices of the PNIAI and its members, and the Group’s on-going influence, today.

Hosted by Soleil Launière
Produced by Ryan Barnett, Maia-Foster Sanchez & Nahka Bertrand
Artwork by Caleb Ellison-Dysart |Theme by Justin Delorme

A Knockabout Media Production | Funded by the Government of Canada

New from Knockabout Media: How I Wrote This w/ Pamela Hensley Among Equals

New from Knockabout Media: How I Wrote This w/ Pamela HensleyThere’s mystery within the creative process and a story behind every story. In the new podcast How I Wrote This, host Pamela Hensley sits down with acclaimed novelists, essayists, playwrights, translators, poets, and short story writers to learn more about their lives and the events that shaped their work.Episode 1: Julia Franck was born in 1970 in East Berlin in the former GDR (German Democratic Republic), a part of Germany that, at the time, was behind the Iron Curtain. As a child, she fled with her mother to the West and lived for nine months in a refugee camp, where they were interrogated by agents of the secret police. Five years later, when she was just thirteen, she left her mother’s home and returned to Berlin, this time living on the Western side with friends. Julia is the daughter of an actress and granddaughter of a sculptor whose family history has provided the backdrop for some of her most powerful books. The Blind Side of the Heart (called the Blindness of the Heart in the US), tells the story of a woman who abandons her son on a railway platform in 1945 after surviving the horrors of the Second World War. It was a story based on her own father’s childhood, a man she only met at the age of fourteen. The novel won the German Book Prize, the highest honour for literature in Germany, and went on to sell over a million copies. Two more of her books have been translated into English: Back to Back, based on her uncle’s life at the time when the Berlin Wall was being built; and West, which was adapted for the screen.Julia’s recommended reads:Herta Müller Katja OskampDana VowinckelHow I Wrote This is created and hosted by Pamela HensleyPresented by Knockabout Media. Original music by Tyler K. RaumanListen and subscribe on Apple, Spotify, Amazon Music, and iHeartRadio.Find out more at our website: http://www.howiwrotethisthepodcast.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
  1. New from Knockabout Media: How I Wrote This w/ Pamela Hensley
  2. BONUS | Roots and Hoots Ep. 46
  3. BONUS | Cory & Norval pt.2
  4. BONUS | Cory & Norval pt.1
  5. BONUS | Bonnie & Daphne