Dylan Miner — This Land Is Always


DATE
Wednesday November 7, 2018
TIME
5:30 PM - 5:30 PM

This Land Is Always
An artist talk as part of the Distinguished Visiting Artist Program
This event is free and open to the public

Dylan AT Miner is a Wiisaakodewinini (Métis) artist, activist, and scholar. He is currently Director of American Indian and Indigenous Studies, as well as Associate Professor in the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities at Michigan State University. Miner sits on the Michigan Indian Education Council and is a founding member of the Justseeds artists collective. He holds a PhD from the University of New Mexico and has published more than sixty journal articles, book chapters, critical essays, and encyclopedia entries. In 2010, he was awarded an Artist Leadership Fellowship through the National Museum of the American Indian (Smithsonian Institution). Miner has been featured in more than two dozen solo exhibitions—with three planned in the next year and a mid-career retrospective being organized for 2021—and has been artist-in-residence or visiting artist at institutions such as the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, École supérieure des beaux-arts in Nantes, Klondike Institute of Art and Culture, Rabbit Island, Santa Fe Art Institute, and numerous universities, art schools, and low-residency MFA programs. His book Creating Aztlán: Chicano Art, Indigenous Sovereignty, and Lowriding Across Turtle Island was published in 2014 by the University of Arizona Press. In the past year, he has published four risograph books: an artist’s book titled Aanikoobijigan // Waawaashkeshi, a booklet on Métis and Anishinaabe beadwork, a chapbook on quillwork, and another titled Bakobiigwaashkwani // She Jumps into the Water. He recently commenced the Bootaagaani-minis ∞ Drummond Island Land Reclamation Project and is collaborating to print lost graphics from the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW). www.wiisaakodewinini.com

The Distinguished Visiting Artist Program is made possible by the generous support of the Rennie Collection.