Indianz.Com > News > Cronkite News: Native artists share their cultures at Arizona festival

Arizona Indian Festival showcases authentic Indigenous art
Artists say knockoffs from overseas undermine their authentic work, which represents their culture
Monday, February 12, 2024
By Marnie Jordan
Cronkite News
SCOTTSDALE — The bustling Arizona Indian Festival showcases Native singing, dancing and art to promote tourism and awareness of Arizona’s tribal communities. Visitors can learn about Indigenous culture and history through vendors, art and demonstrations.
To ensure that visitors to the festival, which was Saturday and Sunday, interact with real Native art, an Arizona Indian Festival committee vets all festival vendors for authenticity. Vendors are also required to show a certificate of degree of Indian or Alaska Native blood, which proves they are authentic members of Native American nations in Arizona.
Silversmith Steve LaRance from the Hopi Tribe said people visiting the Southwest find Native American culture interesting and want an authentic experience. “Our artwork carries a lot of that beauty and culture when we create it.”








Note: This story originally appeared on Cronkite News. It is published via a Creative Commons license. Cronkite News is produced by the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.
Search
Filed Under
Tags
More Headlines
Native America Calling: Mount Rushmore’s troubled history
Native America Calling: Autism support and awareness for Native Americans
Native America Calling: Gathering of MCs and Merciless Savages
Native America Calling: Exploring the toll of climate change on Alaska Native villages
‘Very welcoming and enthusiastic’: Lumbee Tribe awaits word from Washington about federal status
Cronkite News: Trump gives new life to aging coal-fired power plants
Native America Calling: Tribes in the arid southwest face water management uncertainty
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know this Week (April 21, 2025)
Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Nation makes progress for clean water
Native America Calling: Tribes resist fast-tracked Line 5 oil pipeline
Native America Calling: Celebrating Native poetry
Secretary Burgum observes ancestral Native footprints in New Mexico
Cronkite News: Native collective fosters creativity among youth
Arizona Mirror: Alert system in the works for missing endangered relatives
Native America Calling: Tribes challenge states on remaining roadblocks to gaming
More Headlines
Native America Calling: Autism support and awareness for Native Americans
Native America Calling: Gathering of MCs and Merciless Savages
Native America Calling: Exploring the toll of climate change on Alaska Native villages
‘Very welcoming and enthusiastic’: Lumbee Tribe awaits word from Washington about federal status
Cronkite News: Trump gives new life to aging coal-fired power plants
Native America Calling: Tribes in the arid southwest face water management uncertainty
NAFOA: 5 Things You Need to Know this Week (April 21, 2025)
Chuck Hoskin: Cherokee Nation makes progress for clean water
Native America Calling: Tribes resist fast-tracked Line 5 oil pipeline
Native America Calling: Celebrating Native poetry
Secretary Burgum observes ancestral Native footprints in New Mexico
Cronkite News: Native collective fosters creativity among youth
Arizona Mirror: Alert system in the works for missing endangered relatives
Native America Calling: Tribes challenge states on remaining roadblocks to gaming
More Headlines