2023 recipient Robin Wall Kimmerer (Potawatomi) has written several books on Indigenous wisdom and the natural world, including “Braiding Sweetgrass,” which has sold more than two million copies. #ArtsHumanitiesMedal Read more: https://t.co/tEaawGe0No pic.twitter.com/TckngKOhul
— National Endowment for the Humanities (@NEHgov) October 22, 2024
2023 recipient Rosita Worl (Tlingit) is an anthropologist and president of the Sealaska Heritage Institute. From 2000-2013, she served on the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act National Review Committee. #ArtsHumanitiesMedal Read more: https://t.co/JkcHWK0YvC pic.twitter.com/A1kElkucTs
— National Endowment for the Humanities (@NEHgov) October 22, 2024
2022 recipient Joy Harjo of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation is a poet, musician, and playwright who shares the experiences of Native Americans through her work.
— National Endowment for the Humanities (@NEHgov) October 21, 2024
She has served three terms as the poet laureate of the U.S. #ArtsHumanitiesMedal
Read more: https://t.co/XpYyjWo3Ay pic.twitter.com/VP2i3yKpHc
2022 recipient Robert Martin (Cherokee) has been president of the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA), a public tribal college, in Santa Fe since 2007.
— National Endowment for the Humanities (@NEHgov) October 22, 2024
IAIA also operates the Museum of Contemporary Native Arts. #ArtsHumanitiesMedal
Read more: https://t.co/7NWSnLy9BE pic.twitter.com/lUrHJiJud7