News

Lakota bead artist Keely Eagleshield showing off her beadwork headpiece. While based in the small town of Aurora, Eagleshield’s clients come from all over the country and the world.
Teri Greeves builds on a legacy of artistry, rarely recognized by mainstream institutions, that stretches through generations of Native women.
An Ojibwe breechcloth made in 1885 is part of the exhibit "Floral Journey: Native North American Beadwork" at the Autry National Center of the American West in Los Angeles March 15-April 26.
In the 19th century, European traders and colonists brought glass beads to the United States, and Native American artists began using them in their textile embellishment work. Before beadwork ...
YAKIMA, Wash. -- The stories told through the work of Native American beadwork and cornhusk weaving artists are the focus of a workshop at the Yakima Valley Museum from 1-4 ...
Capital City Weekly Beadwork provides a sense of healing for Alaska Native artists “Beading has been a huge part of my healing.” By Mollie Barnes For the Capital City Weekly Thursday, March 26 ...