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June 7, 2002
Heritage Canada sponsors
aboriginal artists gathering
Discussions, workshops,
performances scheduled for three-day event
Nunatsiaq News
Federal Heritage Minister
Sheila Copps will shine the spotlight on Canadas many aboriginal artists
and cultural workers at an elaborate three-day event in Ottawa this month.
Called the "National
Gathering on Aboriginal Artistic Expression," the event will feature workshops,
discussions, shows and performances.
Copps will chair the event,
most of which will take place at the Canadian Museum of Civilization from June
17 to 19.
Norman Moir, an assistant
deputy minister in the Heritage department, said the purpose of the gathering
is to talk about the many topics related to issues faced by aboriginal artists.
Jonah Kelly, a retired
CBC broadcaster from Iqaluit, is the only Inuk sitting on an 11-person aboriginal
advisory committee set up to advise the Heritage department during the conference.
Other committee members
include Phil Fontaine, a former grand chief of the Assembly of First Nations,
Linda Sorensen, a former advisor to NWT Premier Stephen Kakfwi and Roberta A.
Jamieson, the chief councillor of the Six Nations of the Grand River Territory
in south-western Ontario.
Jamieson said she hopes
the event will showcase the achievements of Canadas aboriginal artists
and help the Heritage department understand some of the barriers and challenges
that aboriginal artists face.
"Our cultures are
just as vibrant as all other peoples in the world," Jamieson said at a
press conference this week.
She said the gathering
will not only focus on traditional art forms but also on aboriginal artistic
expression in new media.
"We have many artistic
expressions that are traditional and we have many, as our cultures have evolved,
that are contemporary. We are filmmakers, we are into video, we have people
who come from the field of dance, writing, television, radio, visual arts,"
Jamieson said.
Iqaluit rock singer Lucie
Idlout is scheduled to make some remarks at the opening of the plenary session
on June 18, and Igloolik Isumas celebrated film, Atanarjuat, will be shown
that evening.
This months event
is the first of three aboriginal conferences meant to mark the conclusion of
the International Decade of the Worlds Indigenous People.
A conference on aboriginal
tourism will be held next year, and a conference on aboriginal traditional knowledge
in 2004.
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