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Events and Programs for Academic Year 2006-2007


Each year, the Schingoethe Center hosts a variety of events and programs designed to help inform about many aspects of Native American cultures, both in historical and contemporary contexts.

Unless otherwise noted, these events and programs are free and open to the public (donations are welcome and provide a necessary element of support for our operations). Museum and Exhibit Hours vary according to the time of year, please refer to our schedule for details.

If you wish to bring a group, we ask that you contact us in advance so that we may be sure of adequate seating (630-844-7843, or museum@aurora.edu).

Current Exhibits and Programs | Past Exhibits and Programs | Downstairs Dunham Gallery Calendar of Events


Current Events, Exhibits, Programs

"In Citizen's Garb: Southern Plains Indians, 1889-1891," a vintage photography display
for AU students, faculty/staff and community
Date/Time: Opening Reception on Tuesday, March 27, 2007, 4-7 p.m.; March 27 - April 27, 2007
Location: Aurora campus - Schingoethe Museum, lower level of Dunham Hall
More Information: 630-844-7843

"The Tarahumara of Copper Canyon:" Artifacts from a unique community in an isolated area of Northern Mexico.

Plains Indian Life--including lifeways that revolved around the buffalo and the horse.

"It was only a New World to Columbus:" Stone Tools and the timeline of human history in the Americas.

Navajo Weaving Traditions

Southwest Pottery

Traditions of Basketry

"The Plains Warrior: Courage and Wisdom"

"Native Peoples of Illinois: There's No Place Like Home," Open from September 16, 2004 - Present.
Visitors to the Schingoethe Center often ask, "who lived right here" before European contact? The Center's award-winning display, "Native Peoples of Illinois" provides detailed historical information on the early inhabitants of Illinois. Now, this exhibit has been expanded to include displays devoted to understanding of the "lifeways" of the Woodland tribes in Illinois. A full-scale wigwam and campsite help bring alive daily life in earlier times. Try your hand at assembling the frame and covering of a wigwam--you'll gain a new appreciation for the skill and foresight of native peoples.

"South of the Border: A Shared Heritage," Open from February 2004 - Present.
The area that is now Mexico was home to some of the largest and most complex pre-Columbian native cultures, including the Maya and the Aztecs. Yet many today do not think of this heritage as "Native American," nor see its connection to the native peoples of the area that is now the United States. This exhibit provides a dazzling insight into the rich native cultures that span the U.S.-Mexico border and helps explain many of the common cultural threads between these cultures, and in contemporary Mexican and U.S. society. "South of the Border" is a joint research and construction project involving students and faculty of both Aurora University and East Aurora High School, working with the staff of the Schingoethe Center.

"Children in Native America," Open from September 23, 2003 - Present.
How did they grow up? How did they learn? What did they wear? What did they do, and what did they play with? Artifacts and photographs tell the story, from prehistoric to modern times. Includes material on the Native American Boarding Schools, toys, clothing, historic photographs, and other artifacts.

"Skystone and Silver-- Jewelry of the Southwest"
Selections from the Center's extensive collection of Hopi, Zuni, and Navajo jewelry, together with the history of jewelry in the cultures of the Southwest tribes. Southwest jewelry has ancient roots, leading to an explosion of creative activity in the mid-nineteenth century that resulted in jewelry of breath-taking beauty and power. This exhibit is located directly outside the Nizhoni Gallery and further showcases the Schingoethe collection of art and artifacts from the Southwest culture area. Open from September 23, 2003.

The Nizhoni ("beauty" in Navajo) Southwest Gallery, located in the corner of the Main Gallery, offers an enchanting glimpse into the Native American Southwest. Timbered and plastered in a design reminiscent of the pueblo architecture of the Southwest, this new gallery showcases the Schingoethe's extensive collection of  materials from the Southwest culture area. The current exhibit in the Nizhoni Gallery features a large selection of Kachina dolls, both contemporary and historic, along with displays telling the history of Kachina dolls, explaining the Hopi ceremonial cycle, and showing how we know the appearance of the many Kachinas in the Hopi tradition. Take a closer look at some of the dolls on display, and see how these Kachinas were represented by Hopi artists over a century ago. For classroom use or further study an Exhibit Companion is available for purchase at the Museum Store.


Past Events, Exhibits, Programs

March 14 Alisse Portnoy: White Women Demanding Their Right To Speak: Native American Scholar To Speak at Aurora University March 14 (click to read press release)
September 14 - October 27, 2006 First Light II: New Artists, New Work
Work by Deann Alleman, R. Hope Le Van, Maureen McKee, Gerardo Rios, Juan Sepulveda, Jon Stanicek. Opening reception, Downstairs Dunham Gallery, adjacent to the Schingoethe Center.
October 3, 2006 Gwich’in Elder, Florence Thomas
Gwich’in elder Florence Thomas is from the Old Crow reservation in Canada. Through an informal talk with artifacts from her reservation, she will share her culture. Florence will be speaking specifically about the drilling for oil in the ANWAR (Alaska National Wildlife Refuge) and its impact on her people and their traditional way of life.
October 5, 2006 Ingrid Wendt and Ralph Salisbury
Born and raised in Aurora, Illinois, Ingrid Wendt has been a three-time Fulbright professor in Germany, and guest lecturer at several international universities. She is the author of five books of poems, two anthologies, a book-length teaching guide, and numerous articles and reviews. Winner of the D.H. Lawrence Award, the Oregon Book Award, the Yellowglen Prize, the Editions Prize, and the Carolyn Kizer Award, Ingrid will be reading and discussing the origins of poems from her last two prizewinning books, The Angle of Sharpest Ascending, and Surgeonfish: wanderings through the world, through history, and through the heart. She and her husband, Ralph Salisbury, live in Eugene, Oregon. Ralph Salisbury, Professor Emeritus at the University of Oregon, is the author of two books of short fiction and eight books of poetry, War in the Genes, (Cherry Grove Collections, 2006), the most recent. He has received many awards, among them a Rockefeller, a Chapelbrook, a Northwest Poetry Award; two Fulbright professorships, to Germany and Norway; and an Amparts (USIS) lectureship in India. He will read selections from his published work and present a talk based on his experience as a Native American poet, fiction writer and story teller and on his co-translating Sami (Lapp) poetry.
  NATIVE AMERICAN HERITAGE WEEK OF CELEBRATION
November 6, 2006 Exhibit—A Moment in Time
Opening reception 4:00 – 6:00 p.m
Roughly from the time of the Louisiana Purchase (1803) to the official closing of the western frontier (1890), there is a brief period in which the contact of white explorers and settlers coincides with a rising consciousness of cultural differences and the importance of recording the cultural experience of native peoples. This exhibit displays some of the important work of artists and ethnographers in this period, drawing on the collections of the Schingoethe Center.
November 6 -10, 2006 Native American Film Series
(Titles TBA - call 630-844-5402 after October 15th for details)
November 7, 2006 John Wesley Powell (1834-1902)—Bill Steinbacher-Kemp (this talk corresponds with our exhibit A Moment In Time)
In 1869, John Wesley Powell, a one-armed Civil War Veteran from Illinois, led an epic three-month expedition through the last unmapped section of the continental United States – the canyons of the Green and Colorado Rivers. After attaining national fame as the “Conqueror of the Grand Canyon,” Powell became the architect for the federal science bureaucracy, organizing and leading the U.S. Geological Survey and the Smithsonian Institution’s Bureau of Ethnology. This lecture is illustrated and is based on primary source research. Bill Steinbacher-Kemp holds two MS degrees, the first in History from ISU, and the second in Public Affairs Reporting from the Uof I at Springfield. He has given numerous public lectures and tours concerning Illinois history, in addition to being a fulltime archivist and librarian at the McLean County Museum of History. His talk is presented through the “Road Scholars” program of the Illinois Humanities Council.
November 8, 2006 Native American Dance Workshop—Lance Tallmadge
(University Banquet Hall) Are you ready to dance?! Join Lance Tallmadge (Ho Chunk) and his company as he teaches us to dance Native American style. Lance and his colleagues will share why dance is so important to their traditions, the symbolic meaning in their dances and regalia and the place of the drum in all Native cultures. Then everyone will join the dance circle! There is an admission charge for members of the public, and advance reservations are required because of limited space (630-844-7841).
November 8, 2006 Native American Club Supper Meeting—Learning about Powwow Traditions—Rita Reynolds
(University Banquet Hall) Following the Dance Workshop: Supper meeting of Dreamcatchers, the Aurora University Native American Club. Open to the public by advance reservation; there is a charge for dinner (call 630-844-7841). Supper includes Native American foods and is accompanied by a teaching on the history, traditions, and techniques of dancing in the context of the powwow, by elder Rita Reynolds (Dakota).
November 10, 2006 Woodland and Ojibwa Spirituality—Nick Hockings
Nick Hockings (Ojibwa) offers a world view of the Ojibwa and Woodlands people by focusing on the Madoodooswan (Sweat Lodge). The Sweat is a ceremony done by all tribes for cleansing and healing. Nick will delineate all aspects of the ceremony and relate them to the spiritual views of his people. Hockings is a Cultural Consultant and the creator of Was-Wagoning, a recreated Ojibwa village in Lac du Flambeau, Wisconsin. Nick is also famous for building the wigwam in the Schingoethe Center!

Driving directions to the Schingoethe Center for Native American Cultures at Aurora University.

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