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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum
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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220710T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220710T193000
DTSTAMP:20260519T232238
CREATED:20220705T183940Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220705T183943Z
UID:4953-1657476000-1657481400@gichigamiin-museum.org
SUMMARY:Artist Discussion with Madeline Sayet
DESCRIPTION: \n\n\n\nArtist Discussion and Q&A with Mohegan Director\, Playwright\, and Actor\, Madeline Sayet \nJoin us on Sunday\, July 10 at 6:00 p.m. as we welcome award-winning Mohegan director\, writer\, actor\, and educator Madeline Sayet to the Mitchell Museum of the American Indian. We invite you to this in-person conversation and Q&A to celebrate Sayet’s work and the production of her solo play\, Where We Belong\, now showing at the Goodman Theatre as part of a national tour presented by the Woolly Mammoth Theatre Company in association with the Folger Shakespeare Library.   \nWhere We Belong\, at the Goodman Theatre through July 24\, 2022\, is a personal story of an Indigenous theatre-maker’s journey across geographic borders\, personal history\, and cultural legacies; in search of a place to belong. Sayet’s autobiographical account in Where We Belong shares her experience pursuing a Ph.D. in Shakespeare in England. There she finds a country that refuses to acknowledge its role in colonialism while echoing a journey to England braved by Native ancestors in the 1700s following treatise betrayals\, forcing us to consider what it means to belong in an increasingly globalized world.  \nThis intimate conversation with Sayet is free for Mitchell Museum Members and $10 for non-members. Admission for Native citizens is always free. Tickets can be purchased in advance or onsite.   \nMADELINE SAYET  \nMadeline Sayet\, Playwright\, Performer (she/her) is a Mohegan theater maker who believes the stories we pass down inform our collective possible futures. She serves as an Assistant Professor at Arizona State University with the Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies (ACMRS) and is the Executive Director of the Yale Indigenous Performing Arts Program (YIPAP). She has been honored as a Forbes 30 Under 30 in Hollywood & Entertainment\, TED Fellow\, MIT Media Lab Director’s Fellow\, National Directing Fellow\, Drama League Director-In-Residence\, NCAIED Native American 40 Under 40 and a recipient of The White House Champion of Change Award from President Obama. As a writer her plays include Where We Belong; Up and Down the River; Antigone Or And Still She Must Rise Up; Daughters of Leda; The Neverland and The Fish (In Development). Recent directing work includes Tlingit Christmas Carol (Perseverance Theatre); Midsummer Night’s Dream (South Dakota Shakespeare); Henry IV (Connecticut Repertory Theatre); Whale Song (Perseverance Theatre); As You Like It (Delaware Shakespeare); The Winter’s Tale (Amerinda/HERE Arts); Poppea (Krannert Center\, Illinois); The Magic Flute (Glimmerglass); Macbeth (NYC Parks) and Miss Lead (59e59).  \nwww. madelinesayet.com \n For more information about this program\, please contact: info@gichigamiin-museum.org | (847) 475-1030 | www.mitchellmuseum.org/events/ \n\n\n\n\n \n\n\n                    \n                        \n                        \n                    \n\n        \n        Join us for a screening of the film SHANK\, written\, produced\, and directed by filmmaker Jim Terry\, with music by Peckinslaw. Described as “If Monty Python made John Wick with no money”\, SHANK is a bonkers action comedy you can’t miss. After the conclusion of the film\, there will be a brief discussion featuring artists from the film\, moderated by cast member Aaron Golding. The cast and creative team will reflect on the film’s themes and their experience bringing the piece to life. Light snacks and drinks will be available for purchase\, and all proceeds from this event will directly fund future Sweetest Season programming.     \n\n        \n                        \n        \n                        \n                        \n                        \n                    \n\n        \n                        \n                                                Get Tickets                                        \n                \n            \n\n        \n                    \n                    \n\n        \n                        \n                                                More Info                                        \n                \n            \n\n        \n                    \n                    \n\n        \n                        \n                                                Donate                                        \n                \n            \n\n        \n                        \n        \n                        \n                        \n                        \n                    \n\n    \n\n        \n                        \n        \n                        \n                        \n                        \n                            \n                \n                    \n\n        \n                \n        \n    \n    \n        \n        \n                    \n                    \n\n        \n        Jim Terry is a Ho-Chunk storyteller who’s called Chicago his home for the last ten thousand years or so. His graphic memoir “Come Home\, Indio” was nominated for an Ignatz and was a finalist for the LA Times Bookprize. His comic-book essay “Paper Cuts”\, done in residency at The Newberry Library\, is currently being taught in several schools and he has worked as a comics illustrator for almost two decades with everyone from Marvel to Heavy Metal. This August his prose will be published in the anticipated “Never Whistle At Night 2: Back For Blood” and he just completed the feature length film “Shank”.
URL:https://gichigamiin-museum.org/events/madelinesayet/
LOCATION:Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum\, 3001 Central Street\, Evanston\, IL\, 60201\, United States
CATEGORIES:Upcoming Events
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ORGANIZER;CN="Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum":MAILTO:info@gichigamiin.org
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220718T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220718T203000
DTSTAMP:20260519T232238
CREATED:20220614T193306Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220614T193310Z
UID:4901-1658170800-1658176200@gichigamiin-museum.org
SUMMARY:The Sweetest Season: Indigenous Spoken Word and Song
DESCRIPTION: \n\n\n\nFor tickets and more information\, visit Goodmantheatre.org/Sweetest \n\n\n\n\n\n                    \n                        \n                        \n                    \n\n        \n        Join us for a screening of the film SHANK\, written\, produced\, and directed by filmmaker Jim Terry\, with music by Peckinslaw. Described as “If Monty Python made John Wick with no money”\, SHANK is a bonkers action comedy you can’t miss. After the conclusion of the film\, there will be a brief discussion featuring artists from the film\, moderated by cast member Aaron Golding. The cast and creative team will reflect on the film’s themes and their experience bringing the piece to life. Light snacks and drinks will be available for purchase\, and all proceeds from this event will directly fund future Sweetest Season programming.     \n\n        \n                        \n        \n                        \n                        \n                        \n                    \n\n        \n                        \n                                                Get Tickets                                        \n                \n            \n\n        \n                    \n                    \n\n        \n                        \n                                                More Info                                        \n                \n            \n\n        \n                    \n                    \n\n        \n                        \n                                                Donate                                        \n                \n            \n\n        \n                        \n        \n                        \n                        \n                        \n                    \n\n    \n\n        \n                        \n        \n                        \n                        \n                        \n                            \n                \n                    \n\n        \n                \n        \n    \n    \n        \n        \n                    \n                    \n\n        \n        Jim Terry is a Ho-Chunk storyteller who’s called Chicago his home for the last ten thousand years or so. His graphic memoir “Come Home\, Indio” was nominated for an Ignatz and was a finalist for the LA Times Bookprize. His comic-book essay “Paper Cuts”\, done in residency at The Newberry Library\, is currently being taught in several schools and he has worked as a comics illustrator for almost two decades with everyone from Marvel to Heavy Metal. This August his prose will be published in the anticipated “Never Whistle At Night 2: Back For Blood” and he just completed the feature length film “Shank”.
URL:https://gichigamiin-museum.org/events/the-sweetest-season-indigenous-spoken-word-and-song/
LOCATION:Goodman Theatre\, 170 North Dearborn\, Chicago\, IL\, 60601\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://gichigamiin-museum.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Sweetest-Season-Digital-Flier.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum":MAILTO:info@gichigamiin.org
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220723T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220723T150000
DTSTAMP:20260519T232238
CREATED:20220614T163830Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230728T184756Z
UID:4879-1658574000-1658588400@gichigamiin-museum.org
SUMMARY:Family Day
DESCRIPTION:The Mitchell Museum of the American Indian in partnership with the Native American Chamber of Commerce of Illinois and St. Kateri Center of Chicago\nJoin us for an afternoon of summer fun featuring crafts\, food\, native artists\, and so much more! \nSchedule of Events\n11am-3pm \nAll Day Craft Station \n\nDan Melone – Lithic Tools Station  \nStacy Vittal\, Tribal Sidewalk Art\n\nNative artist booths\, Info booths\, and Food will be available during the event. \nLearn how stone and flint is shaped into arrow heads.  \nJoin the Mitchell Museum for a Critter Visit with the Evanston Ecology Center! Meet live animals up close\, as we learn about each animal’s unique adaptations\, the senses that they use\, the groups they belong to\, and the important roles that they play in their habitats. \nMark Jourdan is a Ho-Chunk and Oneida singer/songwriter based out of Chicago\, IL. He grew up in Chicago spending his summers and weekends traveling the Midwest and Canada going to pow-wows with his family. Music has always played a big part of his life. Driving across the country with his family made the radio and tape players as much of a part of the family as his siblings. His father took him to see B.B. King when he was 16 and that was his first experience of what it meant to “own a room”. \n  \nPlease join us in painting local tribal designs which will flow from the creation story mural to the sidewalks of the Mitchell Museum. \n  \nJennifer M. Stevens is currently a resident of Bayview-Milwaukee\, Wisconsin. She is an enrolled member of the Oneida Nation of Wisconsin through her father and Oglala Lakota through her Mother. She was born in Alexandria\, Virginia and raised on the Oneida Nation-De Pere\, Wisconsin and received her Bachelor’s of Arts Degree in Art from St. Norbert College. She has weaved a creative life as a classical singer and visual artist. She studied Classical Singing and Opera nationally and internationally and she studied Classical Art in college and traditional Oneida Pottery with prominent woodland Indigenous artists such as; Rose K. Kerstetter\, Peter B. Jones\, and Richard Zane Smith. \n*Be sure to check back\, we will be updating with more information! \nAdmission: Free with Regular Museum Admission; Mitchell Museum Members Free. Admission for Native citizens is always free.  Want to become a member? You can find out information here. \nSponsorship info \nFor more information about this program\, please contact: info@gichigamiin-museum.org | (847) 475-1030 \n\n\n                    \n                        \n                        \n                    \n\n        \n        Join us for a screening of the film SHANK\, written\, produced\, and directed by filmmaker Jim Terry\, with music by Peckinslaw. Described as “If Monty Python made John Wick with no money”\, SHANK is a bonkers action comedy you can’t miss. After the conclusion of the film\, there will be a brief discussion featuring artists from the film\, moderated by cast member Aaron Golding. The cast and creative team will reflect on the film’s themes and their experience bringing the piece to life. Light snacks and drinks will be available for purchase\, and all proceeds from this event will directly fund future Sweetest Season programming.     \n\n        \n                        \n        \n                        \n                        \n                        \n                    \n\n        \n                        \n                                                Get Tickets                                        \n                \n            \n\n        \n                    \n                    \n\n        \n                        \n                                                More Info                                        \n                \n            \n\n        \n                    \n                    \n\n        \n                        \n                                                Donate                                        \n                \n            \n\n        \n                        \n        \n                        \n                        \n                        \n                    \n\n    \n\n        \n                        \n        \n                        \n                        \n                        \n                            \n                \n                    \n\n        \n                \n        \n    \n    \n        \n        \n                    \n                    \n\n        \n        Jim Terry is a Ho-Chunk storyteller who’s called Chicago his home for the last ten thousand years or so. His graphic memoir “Come Home\, Indio” was nominated for an Ignatz and was a finalist for the LA Times Bookprize. His comic-book essay “Paper Cuts”\, done in residency at The Newberry Library\, is currently being taught in several schools and he has worked as a comics illustrator for almost two decades with everyone from Marvel to Heavy Metal. This August his prose will be published in the anticipated “Never Whistle At Night 2: Back For Blood” and he just completed the feature length film “Shank”.
URL:https://gichigamiin-museum.org/events/familyday2022/
LOCATION:Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum\, 3001 Central Street\, Evanston\, IL\, 60201\, United States
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://gichigamiin-museum.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/Artboard-1.png
ORGANIZER;CN="Gichigamiin Indigenous Nations Museum":MAILTO:info@gichigamiin.org
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