Episodes
Lisa Falk, ASM director of education, talks with Annie Manuel, a potter from Hickiwan, Arizona, about her art. The interview took place at the 2008 Southwest Indian Art Fair.
Published 06/04/12
Concluding remarks by Dr. Michael Brescia at a symposium held February 12, 2011
Published 11/29/11
Presentation by Dr. Enrique Lamadrid at a symposium held February 12, 2011
Published 11/29/11
Presentation by Tupac Enrique Acosta at a symposium held February 12, 2011
Published 11/29/11
Presentation by Daniel Vega and Anabel Galindo at a symposium held February 12, 2011
Published 11/29/11
Presentation by Dr. L.M. Garcia y Griego at a symposium held February 12, 2011
Published 11/29/11
Zuni silversmith and jeweler Jennie Vicente relates how she became a jeweler and her techniques.
Published 10/21/10
Yaqui silversmith and jeweler Anthony Garcia talks about his work and its inspiration.
Published 09/24/10
Dr. George Cattanach, last surviving member of the student crew that excavated ASM’s famous 12,000 year old mammoth in the early 1950’s, talks about his experiences at the kill site near Naco, AZ working under the direction of pre-eminent archaeologist Emil Haury.
Published 04/22/10
Opening Remarks by the Honorable Juan Manuel Calderón Jaimes, Consul of Mexico in Tucson
Published 01/26/10
UA Professor of History William Beezley discusses the Casasola archive as a window on the world's first social revolution.
Published 01/26/10
Dr. Roberto Cintli Rodriguez illustrates the concept of revolutionary struggle with stories from a Mexican-American perspective.
Published 01/26/10
Dr. Celestino Fernández of the University of Arizona discusses the Mexican revolutionary corrido (ballad) as the "sound" of the revolution, with examples of corridos sung by Guillermo Sáenz.
Published 01/26/10
Cass Fey, Curator of Education at the UA Center for Creative Photography, discusses reading the Casasola photographs as visual documents.
Published 01/26/10
Interview with Zonnie Gorman, daughter of Carl Gorman who was one of the original 29 Navajo Code Talkers. She talks about the Code Talkers' important heritage of bravery within both the Navajo Nation and the United States.
Published 07/31/09
UA Professor of Anthropology David Killick discusses the exhibition of scientific photographs, “Beyond the Naked Eye: Science Reveals Nature’s Art,” during a visit by UA School of Art Professor Moira Geoffrion and her class in December 2008.
Published 04/18/09
Interview with Barbara Ornelas, Navajo weaver, about growing up with two languages, views on women, and weaving
Published 04/01/09
Interview with Sheilah Nicholas, a member of the Hopi Tribe, who is a professor in the Department of Language, Reading and Culture in the College of Education at the University of Arizona, about growing up with two languages, views on women, etc.
Published 02/24/09
Angie Hoffman is a member of the White Mountain Apache Tribe, who is currently a Ph.D. candidate in the department of Language Reading and Culture in the College of Education at the University of Arizona. In this interview she talks about her childhood, education, and language.
Published 01/16/09
Herbert Ben is Navajo from Shiprock, New Mexico who comes from a family of sandpainters. He demonstrates how sandpainting is done and explains the difference between those done as part of ceremonies and those done as art.
Published 08/02/08
Allenroy Paquin is a silversmith and jeweler from Jicarilla Apache and Zuni. He shows us how he makes his silver jewelry and tells why jewelry-making is important in preserving family traditions and educating others about Native cultures.
Published 06/25/08
Interviews with award winning Hopi potter, White Swann and her children who are continuing the pottery-making tradition. conducted by Lisa Falk (ASM Director of Education) at the 2007 Southwest Indian Art Fair.
Published 05/13/08
Interviews with award winning Hopi potter, White Swann and her children who are continuing the pottery-making tradition. conducted by Lisa Falk (ASM Director of Education) at the 2007 Southwest Indian Art Fair.
Published 05/13/08
The Masks of Mexico audio tour was created by students Erich Healy, David Kemper, Shannon Kolder, and Adan Martinez-Kee as part of an internship at the University of Arizona. They worked under the direction of Lisa Falk, ASM director of education. The audio tour is a companion to the exhibition Masks of Mexico: Santos, Diablos y Más at the Arizona State Museum.
Published 09/12/06
Upon entering the exhibition, visitors see a wall full of masks. This outstanding mask collection continues to fascinate people. Meet Zarco Guerrero, a mask maker and educator living in Mesa, Arizona, who serves as our guide for the tour. Museum staff members discuss the allure of the masks, some history of the collection and how the museum works to preserve the masks. Hear from exhibit designer and co-curator Davison Koenig, exhibit co-curator Diane Dittemore, and conservator Teresa Moreno.
Published 09/12/06