View allAll Photos Tagged nativepeoples
AWɄINDUA It means Mundo Nuevo en Kogui indigenal Language . If you like permaculture, they organise workshop of autosustainability in Minca. Agriculture knowledge is also shared directly from our friends Koguis. The place and their project is just incredible. More info on Mundo Nuevo Minca on Facebook (Mundo Nuevo)
I just released a new galery on my website, with high quality 👉 Pictures of Colombia 🇨🇴i 👈
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Sunshine are not made for heavy sleepers.
This morning it was a bit cold outside, and we stayed confortably close to the fire. Meanwhile lights where giving a show outisde, but when I got out, i was ending, and 10 seconds later had totally finished.
Here in Colombia golden light last very short, because we are close from the equator, so when it occurs we need to be more than ready ! ;-)
I just released a new galery on my website, with high quality 👉 Pictures of Colombia 🇨🇴i 👈
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Crawford Lake Indian Village
It was taken inside the large wood longhouse. On one of its walls, there is a painting of a longhouse scene.
A 15th century pre-contact Iroquoian Village has been reconstructed on its original site and features two wooden longhouses that contain sleeping quarters, a fire pit and storage areas for tools, animal hides and food.
(I could not close the door, that is why there is more light on one side.)
A warm thank you for your visits, comments and faves.
🇬🇧 You are welcome on my website to see more 👉 Landscape pictures and Fine Art photography 👈
🇨🇴 Estan bienvenidos en mi sitio para ver mas 👉 Fotos e imagenes de paisajes 👈
🇫🇷 Bienvenus sur mon site pour voir plus de 👉 images et photos de paysages
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🇬🇧 You are welcome on my website to see complete article about the Kogis Indians from Colombia 👈
🇨🇴 Estan bienvenidos en mi sitio para ver mi articulo completo sobre los Indigenas Koguis de Colombia 👈
🇫🇷 Bienvenus sur mon site pour voir mon article complet sur les Indiens Kogis de Colombie 👈
Composition photographique abstraite et fractale, version noir et blanc, disponible sur mon nouveau site :
emmanuellebaudry.wordpress.com/2021/12/31/tribalite-ii-tr...
Fractal & abstract composite photography 12 x 16 inches, black and white version, avalaible on my new website:
emmanuellebaudry.wordpress.com/2021/12/31/tribalite-ii-tr...
ACOMA PUEBLO NEW MEXICO
Acoma Pueblo was first occupied around 1150 AD and together with Taos Pueblo are considered to be the oldest continuously inhabited communities in North America. Acoma sits atop a 365 shear-walled sandstone mesa and contains over 300 structures. Access to the mesa top was by a single footpath and included hand and foot holds in the rock walls. A single access road was blasted into the rock for vehicles in the 1950's. Today, only six families live fulltime in Sky City with the remaining families concentrated in three nearby communities. All supplies must be brought up to the mesa top. Water is available from a community well at the foot of the mesa and the only electricity is through portable generators or solar panels. Sanitation is by family-owned port-o-johns. The Acoma People have a unique system of property ownership where inheritance is passed down through the mother's lineage to the youngest daughter. Sky City is the sun dappled mesa in the center of the image.
🇬🇧 You are welcome on my website to see complete article about the Kogis Indians from Colombia 👈
🇨🇴 Estan bienvenidos en mi sitio para ver mi articulo completo sobre los Indigenas Koguis de Colombia 👈
🇫🇷 Bienvenus sur mon site pour voir mon article complet sur les Indiens Kogis de Colombie 👈
In these Winter Covid Time Coming, don't forget that Colombia is opened for Tourism ! And the best part is that my Photography Tour "Viva Colombia" is still rolling up !
A best of Colombian Carribean Coast with an impressive array of rare and unique photo opportunities beautifully blends people, culture, street, architecture, wildlife, landscapes, and night sky-scapes.
This is #Step1 of the Tour in @mundonuevominca
📅 Dates: Feb 7 - 18, 2021.
🌐 Details: luminousjourneys.net/colombia-photo-tour/
👨👧👦 Only 4 spots Left , so sign up soon!
The Beautiful Colors of Cartagena !
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I have been seing this Palenquera for years now on several magazines & documentaries. I was naively thinking that she had prosperous life as a model. But seing her arriving in the morning, I got aware that it wasn't the case at all...
This is the reverse side of Cartagena's Colors, that in the end didn't change that much since the past centuries...
If you would like to join me on my next photography tour 2020, please visit my website :
🇬🇧 👉 Photo Tours 👈
🇨🇴 👉 Viajes Fotograficos 👈
🇫🇷 👉 Voyages Photos 👈
Lovely smile , in Siera Nevada de Santa Marta. After this trip I sent back a book with all the printed photos. I hope she liked it !
🇬🇧 You are welcome on my website to see complete article about the Kogis Indians from Colombia 👈
🇨🇴 Estan bienvenidos en mi sitio para ver mi articulo completo sobre los Indigenas Koguis de Colombia 👈
🇫🇷 Bienvenus sur mon site pour voir mon article complet sur les Indiens Kogis de Colombie 👈
IT TALKS.
Listen to the silence.
IT SPEAKS.
Listen to your heart.
IT KNOWS.
Gerade in dieser Zeit komme ich wieder darauf, wie wichtig der Umgang für Geist und Seele für uns ist.
Vor langer Zeit hatte ich mal die Gelegenheit in Montana, einige Tage bei den Blackfoot-Indianern verbringen zu dürfen. Der Umgang und die Handhabung mit der Natur hat mich geprägt bis heute. Ich vergleiche täglich.
Eine richtige Veränderung bei uns sehe ich als nicht machbar an.
LEIDER !
A Malaysian Indigenous woman weaves a fabric inside a longhouse in Sarawak, East Malaysia.
Free to download under the Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs copyright. Thank you for following me in my photographic journey - Wayne
These street performers ride the pedestrian zone called The Sparks St.Mall. Laughter is their reward,I guess. Here's Another View>
Wasn't sure to post this shot. But I guess I wanted to showcase how bright the wardrobe was. And be it was inside an arena.
But usually the men performs this dance. But there is this thing called the switch dance which I never heard off. Basically the women perform the dances the men performs. And vice versa with the men performing the women's dances.
Morning Star
“At the river end of the Grand Hall of the Canadian Museum of Civilization [now History] is a dome rising seven stories above the granite floor. Nineteen metres (62 feet) in diameter, the dome is adorned with the striking abstract painting Morning Star, the work of Dene Suline artist Alex Janvier. With the assistance of his son Dean, Janvier began painting in June 1993 and finished in September the same year. Morning Star covers 418 square metres (4,500 square feet).
Features included in the painting reflect common aboriginal values and philosophies. The circle motif represents the circle of life: spiritual and physical, human and natural. Human life, for example, is believed to make a complete circle; a person dies and then life starts again. Likewise, the colours used are meaningful. Among the Chipewyan for example, white, yellow, blue and red are significant colours, seen more frequently than others. Among Native groups generally, these colours are often seen in regalia. In addition, the creation of four distinct areas of colour is important. The number four is significant for Native Peoples: 4 seasons, 4 cardinal points, 4 directions. Janvier refers to these as natural indicators.
The painting is a commentary on the clash of cultures that took place after Europeans arrived in North America and encountered Native peoples. This is one of the major themes addressed in the Museum's permanent exhibition.”
Source: www.historymuseum.ca/cmc/exhibitions/tresors/treasure/283...
Savu is probably my favorite island. One of the southernmost islands of the Indonesian archepelago, it resides in the Savu Sea about 320 nautical miles north of the Australian mainland. It is not the prettiest of the islands, but it is very charming. There are no tourist accommodations on the island… indeed, the natives rarely see outsiders other than government representatives and missionaries.
There is fantastic diving along its coastline to view unique sea creatures that look like blue and white porcelain tea pots displayed side-by-side on underwater shelves, and lots of giant clams, green sea turtles, and schools of barracuda. But what I love most on the island are its beautiful, charming natives. They are very small in stature… men here are a bit more than 5 feet tall, and the women are a few inches shorter. The men are fantastic horsemen, and their horses are very small, even smaller than shetland ponies, and absolutely beautiful with long flowing manes.
The pretty island houses are actually raised wooden platforms with walls of plaited grass that are raised during the day and lowered at night, and their thatch roofs have flowers intertwining through them.
Savu is one of the very few Indonesian islands where Christianity is allowed. Additionally, the islanders also have their own religion that centers upon a sacred ground containing seven large round sacred stones with attendant shamans.
The family seen here dressed in their finest clothes to welcome my exploration group to their special place in the world.
Montezuma Castle is a classic, 45-50 room cliff dwelling, built and occupied by Ancestral Puebloans from 1100 to 1425 CE.
- Montezuma Castle National Monument, Arizona
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Wrapping up our Southern Arizona Adventure 2025 with a visit to Amerind Foundation and Texas Canyon. These are benches on the property.
Amerind seeks to foster and promote knowledge and understanding of the Native Peoples of the Americas through research, education, conservation, and community engagement.
A museum, art gallery, and research center dedicated to archaeology, Native cultures, and Western art. Located in Dragoon, Arizona, and surrounded by the spectacular boulders of Texas Canyon.
At Amerind you can learn about Native American history and their contemporary lives. Here Indigenous communities share their traditional knowledge with all who visit. Academic research center, museum, art gallery, historic property, scenic destination, community gathering place. Amerind is all of this and more. Since 1937 we have been dedicated to preserving and illuminating the cultural objects and traditions of the Native Peoples of the Americas. What began as founder William Shirley Fulton’s personal passion for archaeology, grew to decades of research advancements and cross-cultural understanding.
At Amerind, both on the ground and online, visitors will discover and scholars will advance research that showcases Indigenous voices through Amerind’s ever-growing museum collections, exhibits, art, archives, publications, and library holdings on Native Peoples, the Southwest United States, and Northern Mexico. Amerind will be a sustainable cultural institution, environmentally and financially, that roots itself in the borderlands while it extends its global reach.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amerind_Foundation
The Fulton-Hayden Memorial Art Gallery features paintings by 20th century Anglo and Native American artists.[citation needed]
indigenousarted.home.blog/2018/12/06/the-fulton-hayden-me...
“The Fulton-Hayden Memorial Art Gallery was built in the mid-1950s to house the Fulton family’s art collection. Amerind’s founders Rose Hayden Fulton and William Shirley Fulton played an important part in collecting the fine art in Amerind’s permanent collection. Today the gallery features exhibits by contemporary indigenous artists and other contemporary artists of the American West, in addition to displaying works from the permanent collection. ” -Text courtesy of The Amerind Museum.
Southern Arizona Adventure 2025
Happy Bench Monday, HBM
For many Native Americans, the powwow is much more than just entertainment; it's a way to honor a spiritual connection to their ancestors. It is the dancers who bring life to the songs. At most powwows, the usual category of dances for men include northern traditional or southern straight, the grass dance, and the modern fancy dance. Northern traditional dancers often have lots of natural bird feathers in their outfits, and dance with quick steps, crouching low to the ground-resembling a prairie chicken's walk or a warrior in search of his enemy. Southern straight dancers have a regal air to them, standing upright, and dancing with short purposeful steps. At points in their song they will bend over and dance in semi-circles imitating how they surround their enemy.
Stopping on time is a key, and tricky, aspect of good dancing. Drum groups may make up songs with sudden endings designed to make the dancer misstep. If the dancers can keep up with the pace and not be fooled by a false ending they have a decent chance of winning the cash prize. "When a dancer oversteps, usually the judges won't vote on them at all.".
Regalia is unique to each dancer and dance, and as powwow continues to evolve, there are no hard and fast rules regarding regalia. For instance, the regalia for grass dancer features yards and yards of yarn or ribbon hanging from the shoulders and waist. They symbolize the prairie grass the dancers historically would stomp down to prepare an area for dancing. Other outfits dazzle the eye with intricate beadwork, often containing personal motifs and designs that reflect their heritage. Most beadwork is created by a family member and given as a gift to the dancer, though today folks may also place "special orders" with beadworkers for their regalia. Women's jingle dance dresses are covered with rolled up tobacco tin lids that are attached to the dress. The bright silver shapes create a delightful tinkering sound as the dancers move. (From: www.nativepeoples.com)
© all rights reserved by Mala Gosia. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.
Baguio, Philippines. The Ibaloi are one of the indigenous peoples of the Philippines who live mostly in the southern part of Benguet, located in the Cordillera of northern Luzon, and Nueva Vizcaya in the Cagayan Valley region. They were traditionally an agrarian society. Many of the Ibaloi and Kalanguya people continue with their agriculture and rice cultivation.
fotograzio
Some People have big villas rounded by fences, other live in total freedom, Nature is their garden ! ;-)
🇬🇧 You are welcome on my website to see complete article about the Kogis Indians from Colombia 👈
🇨🇴 Estan bienvenidos en mi sitio para ver mi articulo completo sobre los Indigenas Koguis de Colombia 👈
🇫🇷 Bienvenus sur mon site pour voir mon article complet sur les Indiens Kogis de Colombie 👈
This is at a native San village where the San folks demonstrated the making of a bow and arrows, fire making and bead work. The gentleman who was our guide is named Hendrik.
Wrapping up our Southern Arizona Adventure 2025 with a visit to Amerind Foundation and Texas Canyon. This sculpture is titled Spirit Stars by Hugh Thompson. Yule Marble, 2020. Donated by sculptor. openroadcolorado.com/colorado-state-rock/
Amerind seeks to foster and promote knowledge and understanding of the Native Peoples of the Americas through research, education, conservation, and community engagement.
A museum, art gallery, and research center dedicated to archaeology, Native cultures, and Western art. Located in Dragoon, Arizona, and surrounded by the spectacular boulders of Texas Canyon.
At Amerind you can learn about Native American history and their contemporary lives. Here Indigenous communities share their traditional knowledge with all who visit. Academic research center, museum, art gallery, historic property, scenic destination, community gathering place. Amerind is all of this and more. Since 1937 we have been dedicated to preserving and illuminating the cultural objects and traditions of the Native Peoples of the Americas. What began as founder William Shirley Fulton’s personal passion for archaeology, grew to decades of research advancements and cross-cultural understanding.
At Amerind, both on the ground and online, visitors will discover and scholars will advance research that showcases Indigenous voices through Amerind’s ever-growing museum collections, exhibits, art, archives, publications, and library holdings on Native Peoples, the Southwest United States, and Northern Mexico. Amerind will be a sustainable cultural institution, environmentally and financially, that roots itself in the borderlands while it extends its global reach.
Southern Arizona Adventure 2025
Presentation of indigenous dance from the brazilian federal state of Rondonia, Amazon Region
KONICA MINOLTA DIGITAL CAMERA
This is at a native San village where the San folks demonstrated the making of a bow and arrows, fire making and bead work. The gentleman who was our guide is named Hendrik.
The ancient people who lived here had a nice view out their window. They also had a front row seat to a volcanic eruption and were probably forced to leave whenever the ash and smoke got too thick.
Lomaki Pueblo is one of many settlement sites built by the Ancestral Puebloan people northeast of the San Fransisco Peaks near Flagstaff. This structure was occupied from approximately CE 1060 to CE 1225 at a time when the nearby Sunset Crater volcano was in an active phase. Despite the dangers of living near an active volcano, the ashfall from the eruptions enhanced the soil and improved the ancient people's ability to grow crops.
- Wupatki National Monument, Arizona
{ L } Lightbox view is best
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2011
More artwork at: www.permiandesigns.com/
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NOTE: All works featured here are completely original creations. None are made with the assistance of any form of AI technology in any fashion whatsoever.
Yosemite Falls is the highest waterfall in Yosemite National Park, dropping a total of 739m from the top of the upper fall to the base of the lower fall. Located in the Sierra Nevada of California, it is a major attraction in the park, especially in late spring when the water flow is at its peak, as seen above.
The Upper Yosemite Fall, which is what you mainly see above, is a 440m plunge that alone is among the 20 highest waterfalls in the world. Trails from the valley floor and down from other park areas outside the valley lead to both the top and base of Upper Yosemite Fall. The upper fall is formed by the swift waters of Yosemite Creek, which, after meandering through Eagle Creek Meadow, hurl themselves over the edge of a hanging valley in a spectacular and deafening show of force.
The main village of the native people of Yosemite Valley, the Ahwahneechee, was located at the base of the falls.
The Ahwahneechee people called the waterfall "Cholock" ("the fall") and believed that the plunge pool at its base was inhabited by the spirits of several witches, called the Poloti. An Ahwaneechee folktale describes a woman going to fetch a pail of water from the pool, and drawing it out full of snakes. Later that night, after the woman had trespassed into their territory, the spirits caused the woman's house to be sucked into the pool by a powerful wind, taking the woman and her newborn baby with it.
Seen from Southside Drive, looking north across the valley floor. Scanned from a negative.
This is at a native San village where the San folks demonstrated the making of a bow and arrows, fire making and bead work. The gentleman who was our guide is named Hendrik.
Ancient ruins, volcanoes and snowy mountain peaks. The Box Canyon Ruins are one of many settlement sites built by the Ancestral Puebloan people northeast of the San Fransisco Peaks near Flagstaff. This structure was occupied from approximately CE 1065 to CE 1225 at a time when the nearby Sunset Crater volcano was in an active phase. Despite the dangers of living near an erupting volcano, the ashfall from the eruptions enhanced the soil and improved the ancient people's ability to grow crops.
- Wupatki National Monument, Arizona
{ L } Lightbox view is best
© All Rights Reserved
Ancient ruins, volcanoes and snowy mountain peaks. The Box Canyon Ruins are one of many settlement sites built by the Ancestral Puebloan people northeast of the San Fransisco Peaks near Flagstaff. This structure was occupied from approximately CE 1065 to CE 1225 at a time when the nearby Sunset Crater volcano was in an active phase. Despite the dangers of living near an erupting volcano, the ashfall from the eruptions enhanced the soil and improved the ancient people's ability to grow crops
- Wupatki National Monument, Arizona
{ L } Lightbox view is best
© All Rights Reserved
This is one of the sacred places in Colombia, where the sky refills it's energy in the Lagunas. During the night it makes an incredible show of light and mysticism. Here, they say that people can transform in a cloud and travel everywhere !
Hope you like my visual interpretation of this place.
I just released a new galery on my website, with high quality 👉 Pictures of Colombia 🇨🇴i 👈
If you need a photo for your blog or magazine, please write me here : Editorial Use Request 📰