
In this episode, Petala Ironcloud outlines the rigorous, analytical methods he uses to dissect contemporary media frameworks and examine the systems that control indigenous representation. His professional philosophy is anchored by the definitive belief that "representation is never neutral." Petala details how his writing process involves looking past the surface aesthetic of a piece of art to interrogate the underlying power structures, analyzing who funded the project, who tells the story, and who ultimately benefits from the narrative.Tactically, Petala approaches cultural criticism with a sharp focus on language, intent, and institutional accountability. He highlights his previous community organizing work, which included helping establish the very first American Indian cultural district in the United States. This structural process required navigating complex city bureaucracies, managing public policy pipelines, and building intentional alliances to ensure that physical geographic boundaries were legally designated to protect and celebrate indigenous presence.For emerging writers and advocates seeking to build an audience and expose systemic biases, Petala emphasizes the tactical value of digital platforms and cloud accessibility. He discusses his upcoming literary collaborations, including a highly anticipated project with the prestigious art book publisher Taschen. By systematically organizing his critiques and prioritizing absolute clarity of intent, Petala demonstrates how marginalized creators can leverage low-overhead digital tools to counter paid corporate public relations campaigns and rewrite mainstream cultural history.
Jun 25
45 min

This episode pulls back the curtain on the complex legal, historical, and procedural mechanics defining the ongoing crisis at Hickory Ground. The discussion centers heavily on how institutional frameworks like NAGPRA (the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act) can catastrophically fail the very communities they were codified to protect. Listeners will hear an analytical breakdown of how tribal sovereign immunity is currently being leveraged as a tactical shield by the Poarch Band to veil unlawful acts and evade accountability for site excavation from the courts.From a procedural standpoint, the speakers expose the clinical and disrespectful methods utilized by institutions handling excavated history. Rather than receiving proper repatriation, the remains of fifty-seven ancestors are currently stored in un-climate-controlled Rubbermaid tote boxes at Auburn University, where mold continues to spread. Furthermore, the university and developing entities have tactically weaponized bureaucracy by actively denying direct descendancy claims made by tribal leaders like Miko Thompson, creating high administrative barriers to stop the return of these bodies.The professional philosophy shared by the legal and cultural advocates in this episode demands a complete dismantling of double standards in historical preservation. They argue that if an institution excavated fifty-seven bodies from Arlington Cemetery and refused to return them, it would spark an immediate national outrage; thus, Native burial grounds must be afforded the exact same tactical protections and legal parameters as any mainstream white cemetery. True sovereignty, the advocates argue, cannot exist if a tribe destroys the baseline lifeways, languages, and ancestral respects that form the legal foundation of its political existence.
Jun 4
15 min

Beyond the Lens: Cara Romero on Cultural Photography, Native Representation, and Visual Storytelling
In this episode, Cara Romero details her meticulous and layered approach to building theatrical, high-production visual narratives. Formally trained in black-and-white composition, Cara adheres to the philosophy that if a visual concept does not function in monochrome, it will not succeed in color. However, she intentionally leans into an intense, highly produced use of color and controlled lighting. She explains that this polished aesthetic serves a specific tactical purpose: it acts as a universal language of the present, signaling to the viewer that Native people are thriving in the current moment, rather than existing only in the past.When translating a concept from her mind's eye into a physical print, Cara structures her production process with immense flexibility. She likens a live photo shoot to jazz improvisation, arriving with a "set list" of ideas but allowing the collaborative energy of her team and subjects to shape the final frame. Her subjects are almost exclusively drawn from friends and family, which fosters a critical environment of trust and vulnerability. Once a shoot wraps, Cara transitions to a separate, painterly editing phase in the digital or chemical darkroom, where she painstakingly selects the singular composition that contains the exact psychological and emotional connections she aims to evoke.Furthermore, Cara discusses her recent tactical pivot back to medium format black-and-white film and traditional cyanotype printing on silk. In a fast-paced digital era where artificial intelligence and technology are hurtling forward, she embraces the roundness of emulsion and chemical light reactions to capture a softer, slower dreamscape of her home community. For emerging Native photographers, Cara offers the practical advice to view investing in expensive gear and film not as a frivolous expense, but as a radical act of self-care and professional dedication.
May 28
45 min

Edgar Villanueva’s story begins within the Lumbee Tribe of North Carolina, but his path was uniquely shaped by his experience as an "urban native" growing up in Raleigh. Being the only Native student in his school for most of his life, Edgar navigated a dual identity, spending summers in his tribal community while living a suburban life during the school year. It wasn't until college that he fully leaned into his heritage, joining Native student organizations and eventually leading his family through the process of formal tribal enrollment.His professional entry into the world of philanthropy was almost accidental. After starting his career in public health, he was recruited by a foundation to manage health grants. Initially, he viewed philanthropy through a "savior" lens, excited by the prospect of having millions of dollars to "save the world." However, as he moved deeper into the ivory towers of the industry, he began to see the disconnect between the wealthy institutions and the actual needs of the communities they intended to serve.The realization that philanthropy was often an extension of colonial dynamics led Edgar to write his groundbreaking book, Decolonizing Wealth. He recounts the internal struggle of being a Native man in a field built on stolen land and labor, and how that tension eventually fueled his mission to transform the industry. Today, his journey from a young man seeking his own cultural roots to a global leader in social finance serves as a powerful testament to the importance of indigenous perspectives in modern economics.
May 7
55 min

Native art isn’t a relic. It’s a dispatch from the present — and the Rockwell Museum’s new exhibition, Native Now, makes that impossible to ignore.In this episode, host Joe Williams sits down with Amanda Lett, Curator of Collections and Exhibitions at the Rockwell, and Randee Spruce, Seneca Nation artist and independent curator, to unpack one of the most significant contemporary Native American art exhibitions in the museum’s 50-year history. Native Now brings together works spanning Indigenous landscapes, Native futurism, and the concept of “always becoming” — a phrase the curators chose specifically because it resists the idea that Native peoples and their stories are finished. The show features artists including Jeffrey Gibson, Virgil Ortiz, Wendy Red Star, and Theresa Baker, many of whose works appear publicly for the first time.Amanda and Randee speak candidly about what it meant to build a real curatorial partnership — one where the exhibition labels were written entirely from artists’ own words, where themes were reshaped until they felt true rather than academic, and where the Seneca Nation’s voice had a genuine seat at the table. This is a conversation about art, land, resilience, and what it looks like when a museum actually listens.
Apr 23
51 min

On this episode of Beyond the Art, we sit down with filmmakers Ben West, alike mteuzi, and Yancey Burns from Rena Flying Coyote Collective, a Native-led nonprofit using film as a tool for social change. They share how their personal paths—from rural Appalachia and small Oklahoma communities to art school and public interest law—eventually converged through the acclaimed documentary Imagining the Indian: The Fight Against Native American Mascotting. Together, they unpack why mascots are not a matter of opinion but of public health, drawing on decades of research that links these images to depression, low self-esteem, and suicidal ideation among Native youth.The conversation then traces the birth of Rena Flying Coyote Collective and its four pillars: filmmaking, coalition building, education, and hands-on community workshops. Ben and Yancey describe touring Imagining the Indian across Turtle Island, building partnerships, and realizing the film needed to live on as classroom curriculum, not just as a one-time screening. They talk about their commitment to making sure Native communities are not just subjects in front of the camera but leaders behind it, and why the collective was founded specifically to help other Indigenous storytellers access tools, funding, and mentorship.From there, the group turns to the projects currently on their plates, including a powerful new documentary being filmed in Picher, Oklahoma, where Quapaw Nation is leading the cleanup of a massive Superfund site created by historic lead and zinc mining. They explore how environmental justice, land sovereignty, and Missing and Murdered Indigenous People intersect on this landscape, and share a preview of Loyal to the Soil, their film on Native military service and the disconnect between Native veterans and the systems meant to serve them. If you care about representation that moves beyond symbols into real-world impact, this episode offers both hard truths and active pathways to change.
Apr 9
1 hr 7 min

In this episode of Beyond the Arts, Joe sits down with Jamie Gentry, a Danakhtak and Mamaleila Kla artist from the Kwakwaka'wakw Nation, whose moccasins are as much about relationship and story as they are about footwear. Jamie shares how being raised deeply rooted in culture, potlatches, and family travel shaped her sense of belonging and her path toward making moccasins as a way of life.Jamie reflects on the moment she first learned to make moccasins and how the practice quickly became a magnetic pull she could not ignore. She describes her intentional process of never cutting into hide until she knows who a pair is for, treating each piece as a living co-creation that carries both her energy and the wearer's, and how color, conversation, and intuition guide her designs.The conversation stretches into sustainability, slow making, and the healing power of connection—to our hands, our communities, and the land. Jamie talks about food sovereignty, her studies in holistic nutrition and herbal medicine, and her dream of creating a retreat space where Indigenous people can come to rest, be held by the land, and refill their spirits for the work they carry back home.
Mar 26
41 min

In this heartfelt episode of Beyond the Arts, we sit down with Cary Morin, a master of American Roots music and Crow tribal member, to explore his four-decade journey from playing piano as a child in Great Falls, Montana, to becoming an internationally recognized guitarist and songwriter. Cary shares how picking up his brother's guitar in sixth grade sparked a lifelong passion, and how his sound evolved from bar band productions in Colorado to the sophisticated finger-style acoustic work that defines his music today. His journey includes navigating industry changes—from the drinking age shift that emptied clubs to the internet revolution that transformed how artists connect with audiences.Cary discusses the transformative moment when a friend gave him a guitar tuned to an open tuning, urging him to stick with it despite the initial confusion. That single gift unlocked a completely new approach to finger-style playing and chord voicings that has defined his sound for the past 20 years. He opens up about stage anxiety—surprisingly more intense in intimate venues with silent crowds than in large halls—and how mastering his material became the cure. The conversation includes memorable moments from the road, including the surreal experience of Jackson Browne handing him a guitar during an encore, and playing NPR's eTown after listening to the show for decades.The episode explores Cary's perspective on indigenous identity and artistry, addressing the question his management posed: "Are you a native person who is a songwriter, or a songwriter who happens to be native?" Cary chose to be known first as a songwriter, believing that the quality of the songs and the stories they tell should take precedence while still honoring his Crow heritage through gospel tunes for his Christian family, historical narratives about his people, and the story his great-grandmother told at his naming ceremony. He discusses the pride he feels seeing indigenous artists excel across all art forms, the ambitious Turtle Island play that brought 50 performers together (including his mother and all his children), and his latest album Innocent Allies—13 songs inspired by Charles Russell paintings that he describes as a "Western album" rather than country or rock.
Mar 12
48 min

In this powerful episode of Beyond the Arts, we sit down with Dr. Lars Krutak, known globally as "the tattoo anthropologist," to explore the profound world of indigenous tattooing traditions. For nearly 30 years, Lars has traveled to over 50 countries, working with 50-60 indigenous communities to document tattooing practices that are rapidly disappearing. His journey began in 1996 in Alaska, where he encountered a Gwich'in elder with traditional chin tattoos, sparking a lifelong mission to preserve these visual narratives before they vanish forever.Lars shares incredible stories from his fieldwork, from the St. Lawrence Island Yupik elders who taught him that tattoos are "life stories on skin" to the medicinal tattoos in Borneo that mirror techniques used by the 5,000-year-old Iceman. He discusses the devastating impact of colonization and boarding schools on tattooing traditions, and how contemporary indigenous communities are reclaiming these practices as acts of healing and cultural resurgence. Lars emphasizes the ethical dimensions of his work, always prioritizing community consent, giving back resources, and centering indigenous voices in his publications.This conversation goes far beyond aesthetics to reveal how tattoos function as medicine, cosmology, historical records, and declarations of indigenous identity. Lars's latest book, Indigenous Tattoo Traditions, published by Princeton University Press in 2025, represents decades of collaboration with tattooed elders and their communities. Whether you're interested in anthropology, indigenous cultures, art history, or the healing power of cultural reclamation, this episode offers profound insights into traditions that deserve recognition as vital contributions to human heritage.
Feb 26
50 min

In this episode, we sit down with Eric-Paul Riege, who takes us on a journey through his artistic legacy rooted in a lineage of weavers and fiber artists. Eric shares how these early memories of craft have shaped his creative process, often interweaving elements of story, ceremony, and space. Through his work, Eric explores the relationship between memory and material, creating totems that capture and preserve ancestral narratives. Eric discusses the transformative experiences that have defined his path as an artist. He reflects on his family's influence and how his upbringing within a community of makers has deepened his connection to the materials he uses. This connection manifests in his work as he blends traditional practices with contemporary art forms, offering a rich tapestry of cultural continuity and innovation.As Eric shares his journey, listeners gain insight into the delicate balance he maintains between honoring his heritage and pushing artistic boundaries. His reflections offer a powerful reminder of the role memory plays in art and life, with his creations acting as living embodiments of history, tradition, and dreams.
Feb 12
45 min
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