FOR WOODLAND INDIAN ARTISTS
Application packets are now available for the 2019 Woodland Indian Art Show. Use the link below to save and then print the application. Fill it out and email or mail your completed application. You can pay your fees online with PayPal. (See links at the bottom of this page.)
To fill out an online application CLICK HERE!!! Pay fees below. Send photos of your work to info@woodlandindianart.com.
THOSE INVOLVED IN THIS ART SHOW BELIEVE…
it is vital that native tribes hold onto their unique cultural identity. Too often, native culture and arts are mistakenly viewed as one culture, the same in every tribe. We strive to raise awareness of Woodland Indian art. We want people to recognize that Woodland Indian art is on a different track than Southwestern Indian art. The Woodland Indian tribes have floral, woodland animals and birds, and streams in their environment. That’s different from the Southwestern Indians who have mountains, prairies, and deserts in their surroundings.
The Woodland Indians use media such as porcupine quills, moose hair, black ash and birch baskets, flat and raised beadwork. The Oneida people have their wampum belts, raised beadwork and unique pottery designs; the Menominee have wood carvers and painters who bring out the spirit of the woods they live in; the northern Chippewas have lure carvers and birchbark art. These are just a few examples of Woodland Indian art that come together annually at the Woodland Indian Arts & Culture Festival.
Application packets are now available for the 2019 Woodland Indian Art Show. Use the links above to print the application. Please fill out the application. Email or mail your completed application. You can pay your fees on PayPal. (See below) If we receive your completed application after April 15th, 2019, we will not be able to put your bio in the program book.
The Woodland Indians use media such as porcupine quills, moose hair, black ash and birch baskets, flat and raised beadwork. The Oneida people have their wampum belts, raised beadwork and unique pottery designs; the Menominee have wood carvers and painters who bring out the spirit of the woods they live in; the northern Chippewas have lure carvers and birchbark art. These are just a few examples of Woodland Indian art that come together annually at the Woodland Indian Arts & Culture Festival.
Application packets are now available for the 2019 Woodland Indian Art Show. Use the links above to print the application. Please fill out the application. Email or mail your completed application. You can pay your fees on PayPal. (See below) If we receive your completed application after April 15th, 2019, we will not be able to put your bio in the program book.