ICT
Sandra Hale Schulman
ICT
The latest: Theater history as activist art, a community gathering place and tribal tales on film
ART: Dual theater/art shows in Santa Fe
The occupation of Alcatraz by the Indians of All Tribes in 1969 and a treatise written at the Institute of American Indian Arts that same year inspired a presentation on Native theater at two venues in Santa Fe — SITE Santa Fe and the Museum of Contemporary Native Art.
The presentation, “Indian Theater: Native Performance, Art, and Self-Determination since 1969,” is the first major exhibition that centers performance as an origin point for the development of contemporary art by Native artists, opening June 5 through September 7, 2026.
Curated by Candice Hopkins, Carcross/Tagish First Nation, executive director and chief curator of Forge Project, the exhibition features artists who are Native American, Alaska Native, First Nations, Métis, and Inuit. It traces the history of artistic experimentation with political action, critical engagement with existing Native practices, and a reconsideration of identity.
“As a curator at the MoCNA, the document published in 1969 called ‘Indian Theater and Experiment and Process,’ was amazing to me,” Hopkins said in a statement. “It’s manifesto for a new Native theater movement that was totally contemporary, totally experimental, and was also looking to certain Native traditions to make this new movement.
“I was interested in this question of what was in the air in 1969, the beginning of what we now call the self-determination era for Native people,” she said.
From drum groups to dances, stay connected to powwow communities nationwide with ICT’s seasonal newsletter and monthly on-the-ground reporting.
COMING SOON
Hopkins notes that the occupiers were students from the University of California, Berkeley, testing the authority of an 1800 Lakota treaty that had promised all federal surplus land to the Lakota people.
“It was really a test of those treaty rights, but it sparked not only a national movement, but really an international movement,” Hopkins said.
“Indian Theater” brings together more than 100 works by 40 artists including Rebecca Belmore, Anishinaabe; Nicholas Galanin, Tlingit/Unangax̂; Jeffrey Gibson, Mississippi Band of Choctaw and Cherokee; Maria Hupfield, Anishinaabe, Wasuksing First Nation; and Eric-Paul Riege, Diné.
The show uses sound and instrumentation, regalia and more through theater, live performance, sculptures, public interventions, and collective actions. A highlight is the presentation of digitized footage of Spiderwoman Theater featuring Lisa Mayo, Gloria Miguel, and Muriel Miguel, Kuna and Rappahannock Nations, shown for the first time since its original live debut.
COMMUNITY ARTS: Wisdom, laughs and frybread
Los Angeles’ new Chapter House brought together some of the hippest actors, musicians, designers and media personalities for a blowout NDN Flea Market and Sage Based Wisdom show on May 30.
ICT is Native-led, nonprofit, and free to read. We depend on readers like you to keep our journalism independent and our coverage strong.
Secure giving · 501(c)(3) nonprofit
The Chapter House is a place for Indigenous peoples and allies to convene for art, music, food, and crafts while celebrating Indigenous cultures. With a large outdoor space and more-intimate indoor spaces, the all day NDN Flea Market took over all of it with jewelry, clothing, community activist tables, piñon coffee and frybread in several flavors served up by comedian Jana Schmeiding, Lakota, of “Reservation Dogs.”
After the market ended, the space was converted into a seated performance venue for Schmeiding’s “Sage Based Wisdom” show, in which she takes questions from the audience. She and her guest Memo Torres of “LATaco” — an online news site that tracks federal immigration raids and other major Los Angeles events — then attempt to give honest but funny advice.
After the funny business, Oglala Lakota musician and actor Mato Standing Soldier, professionally known as Mato Wayuhi (“The Lowdown”), took the stage for a rap performance with guest singers and musicians. Standing Soldier has been on a roll for several years releasing studio albums, his original soundtracks for “Reservation Dogs” and the upcoming Netflix release of “Free Leonard Peltier’; and his affecting turn in “The Lowdown” opposite the late Graham Greene.
Fans lined up at his merchandise table afterwards to buy his CDs and get his autograph, including actress Cara Jade Myers (“Killers of the Flower Moon”).
The founder of the new space is Emma Robbins, a Diné artist, activist and community organizer who works to empower Indigenous women. The Chapter House plans more events in the future, including music, parades and sound baths.
FILM: Movies that sing
The Eternal Song film collective is releasing 12 documentary films that tell the stories of Indigenous traditions, with each offering ancestral wisdom and calling viewers to remember, grieve, heal, and act.
The newest film is “Little Singer,” available now through the film collective website, which tells the story of a medicine man and a small school where grief and resilience meet in song, teaching, and k’é (kinship).
“Amidst the wide horizons of Diné land, the legacy of historical trauma echoes through generations,” according to a description of the film. “‘Little Singer’ is rooted in the land and carries the vision and medicine of k’é for those yet to come.”
The film features Jeneda and Clayson Bennally, Diné, of the band Sihasin and their medicine man hoop dancer father Jones, as well as Pat McCabe and others who tell their stories of finding and advancing their cultural roots.
Other films available include ”Mauri: The Vital Essence of All Beings,”; “If An Owl Calls Your Name”; and “Haida,” which tell stories of homeland struggles and triumphs.
Sandra Hale Schulman, of Cherokee Nation descent, has been writing about Native issues since 1994 and writes a biweekly Indigenous A&E column for ICT. The recipient of a Woody Guthrie Fellowship, she… More by Sandra Hale Schulman ![]()
Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under a Creative Commons license.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
- You must give ICT credit, so please include a byline using the following format:
- [Firstname] [Lastname], ICT. Example: Jourdan Bennett-Begaye, ICT
- Include this notation at the top of the story (or at the bottom) with an embedded link to the original story on the ICT website: This story was originally published by ICT.
- Add a link to the overall ICT website in the byline
- Stories may be edited for in-house style. Any edits to content other than style changes must be approved by ICT before publishing. More substantial changes should be noted as additional and conducted by your publication. Email: dianna@ictnews.org and managingeditor@ictnews.org
- You can publish any photos that are credited to ICT with the stories that they originally appeared in. For any other uses, you must seek permission from us at managingeditor@ictnews.org .
- At the end of the story, include the following company bio: “ICT is an independent, nonprofit multimedia news organization covering Indigenous issues and communities. We are supported by foundations, donor contributions, and corporate sponsorships. Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, and Bluesky.”
- If you share the story on social media, please mention @indiancountrytoday on Facebook and Instagram.
- Don’t sell the story.
- Don’t sell ads against the story. Feel free, however, to publish it on a page with ads you’ve already sold.
- Content should not be published behind a paywall out of respect for ICT’s mission to ensure that its content is free for the public good.
by Sandra Hale Schulman, ICT
June 5, 2026
IndiJ Public Media is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit sustaining Indigenous journalism that uplifts Native communities, supported by members, donors, and partners.
ICT is IndiJ Public Media’s flagship multimedia outlet, delivering award-winning Indigenous news to national and global audiences.
Your donation sustains Indigenous journalism and gives you behind-the-stories coverage from ICT, along with key updates from our parent nonprofit, IndiJ Public Media.
You deserve Indigenous journalism that answers to you — independent, nonprofit, and always free to read. Your support keeps it that way.
From drum groups to dances, stay connected to powwow communities nationwide with ICT’s seasonal newsletter and monthly on-the-ground reporting.
COMING SOON

Leave a Reply