NEWS RELEASE                      

For Immediate Release

 

Contact: 

 

Eric Davis, Marketing & Communications Director

505.424.2351, or [email protected] 

 

 

Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA)
Senior Created Project to Support
Missing/Murdered Indigenous Women

Red Quilt Solidarity Project to be on Display at 
IAIA Campus and Elsewehere


Santa Fe: April 12, 2019.

The Red Quilt Solidarity Project (#RQSP) is an international awareness initiative dedicated to Missing/Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW). While the numbers of unreported, unsolved, and uninvestigated cases of MMIW are astounding, this is not just an Indigenous problem. Violence against women is rampant all over the world. This is a global issue. In response, IAIA Student Tina Sparks started her own quilt project, inviting people from across the country to participate.

In January 2019, Tina's Red Quilt Solidarity Project; a dress to honor MMIW by designed by Patricia Michaels' (Taos Pueblo); and IAIA Academic Dean Charlene Teters' (Spokane) painting  "Lady in Red Shawl" were selected to be part of "Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women" Awareness Day during American Indian Day on February 1, 2019 in the State Capitol NM Congresswoman    Deb Haaland (Laguna Pueblo) was also recognized for  her tireless work on behalf of MMIW and bringing the issue to national attention.

Dean Charlene Teters and Amelia Sparks-Schuler at the StandUp4MMIW event on the IAIA Campus


As a result of that event, Tina was invited and encouraged to attend Senate Committee meetings to advocate for MMIW bills being proposed. All three Senate proposals that were written to date, have passed the committees, and are on their way to the next level in the process.  

So far, the Tina's RQSP has received 12 submissions from across the United States, and many more are in the works. This project will be open for submissions throughout the next 12-18 months. 

The national submissions to the Red Quilt Solidarity Project, as well as Tina's BFA quilt creation and performance piece, will all be part of the BFA Senior Art Show at IAIA on April 19, 2019 from 5:30-8:00 pm. The RQSP will be installed in the Library Building in front of the auditorium. For directions and a map of the campus, visit iaia.edu/about/visit.

A portion of the quilt the be displayed at IAIA.


The short-term goal for this project to travel around the country as an installation paired with a community art experience that will initiate introspection, engage community conversation and increase awareness of Missing/Murdered Indigenous Women. 

The long-term goal is to transport the project to Washington, DC in 2020, and display it on the national mall, much like the AIDS Quilt in the 1980's, creating a visual voice calling for visibility, funding and change.

For anyone interested in participating in the project, please contact [email protected] or at the Red Quilt Solidarity Project Facebook Page.
 

Sandra Claymore (Lakota), Senator John Pinto (Navajo), and Tina Sparks 

For further information, or to interview Tina Sparks, please contact 
Eric Davis  at  505.424.2351, or  [email protected].

 
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Offering undergraduate degrees in Studio Arts, Creative Writing, Cinematic Arts and Technology, Indigenous Liberal Studies, Museum Studies, and Performing Arts -- an MFA in Creative Writing -- along with certificates in Business and Entrepreneurship, Museum Studies, and Native American Art History -- IAIA is the only college in the nation dedicated to the study of contemporary Native arts. The school serves 495 full time equivalent (FTE) Native and non-Native American college students from across the globe.  IAIA is accredited by the Higher Learning Commission -- and is the only college in New Mexico accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design

About IAIA  -- For over 50 years, the Institute of American Indian Arts has played a key role in the direction and shape of Native expression. With an internationally acclaimed college, museum, and tribal support resource through our Land Grant Programs, IAIA is dedicated to the study and advancement of Native arts and cultures -- and committed to student achievement and the preservation and progress of their communities.  Learn more about IAIA and our mission at   www.iaia.edu.
The Institute of American Indian Arts Foundation is a tax-exempt 501(c)(3) organization.  To make a donation on-line, please click here -- or call toll free: 1.800.804.6423.