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2000 Native American Film and Video Festival

Welcome to Native Networks

By Elizabeth Weatherford, Head of the Film and Video Center
November 2001

In 2001 the NMAI has launched the Native Networks Website to welcome you to the field of Native media throughout the Americas. The site provides information about new productions and media makers, current areas of special interest and accomplishments in the field. As I am writing at the time of the site's launch, it still is a pilot project. For this reason I encourage you to give us your opinions and suggestions about its technical aspects, accessibility, and contents. Let us know what you would like the site to offer for your participation and, if you are a Native media maker, how you'd like to use the site to express what your own interests and activities are.

Mission Statement

The Film and Video Center of the National Museum of the American Indian is dedicated to presenting and disseminating information about the work of Native Americans in media. The Center's Native Networks Website has four goals:

To provide a representation of current work in the field of Native American media including film, video, radio, television and new media.

To provide information to the public about the outstanding media productions which have been presented in the museum's programs.

To provide the FVC and NMAI a way to maintain regular and frequent contact with the community of Native American independent media producers.

To provide a space for Native media makers to exchange ideas and to gather professional information.

Visitor Information

We have added this section to help you better use this Website. Based on discussion with constituents this Website has been built with technological accessibility as a priority. As the level of technological access among our constituents improves, we intend to add more features.

Please be aware that this site is best viewed with your screen settings at 800 by 600 pixels.

If you have any questions or comments, please email the Webmaster.

Printing the Website

Set print margins:

In your browser select File/Page Setup. Re-set the left and right margins to .5"

Internet Explorer:

1. Click the Tools menu, Options, and select the Advanced tab.

2. Scroll down to the "printing" category. Make sure the box for printing backgrounds is checked. Then click OK.

With Netscape:

1. Click File/Page Setup.

2. Make sure the "Print backgrounds" box is unchecked.

Flash

For the gateway and home pages, we used Flash technology to create an animated graphic. It is designed to be viewed in Flash 4.0 or higher. If you use Netscape as your browser and you would like to view the Flash graphic, you may need to reinstall the plug-in on your computer. A non-Flash graphic is available if the Flash plug-in is not found. It will load automatically and not interfere with the content of the Website itself.

For information regarding system requirements and instructions to download, please enter Download Macromedia Flash Player.

Portable Document Files (PDF)

To view PDFs, you need to have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed on your computer. If you are not currently using Adobe Acrobat Reader, you will need to download and install it to access the PDFs. It is free to download, and installation is simple.

For information regarding system requirements and instructions to download, please enter Download Adobe Arcrobat Reader.

Real Media

To view streaming media samples (video and audio) on this Website, you will need to have Real Media Player installed on your computer. If you are not currently using Real Media Player, you will need to download and install it to access the streaming samples.

For information regarding system requirements and instructions to download, please enter Download Real Media Player.

Online Translation Tools

There are several Websites that offer free online translation tools. They can translate blocks of text or whole Webpages. We can recommend at least three of them: Google's translator at www.google.com/language_tools?hl=en, Free Translation's translator at www.freetranslation.com, and Altavista's translator at http://world.altavista.com/.

We appreciate your comments regarding these or other translation tools.

Website Staff

Translators

  • Amalia Cordova
  • Carlos Gómez

Editors English Version

  • Emelia (Millie) Seubert, Assistant Curator, FVC
  • Lisa Siegrist

Editor Spanish Version

  • Amalia Cordova

Off-line Access

Discussions at the 2000 Native American Film and Video Festival underscored the fact that the audience we hope will use this material does not necessarily have Internet and/or even computer access. We are considering distributing printed copies and CD copies of the Website to community media organizations throughout Latin America. We will evaluate and report on this process as we proceed and come to better understand its difficulties. If you have any recommendations, please share them with us.

Project History

The goal of the Native Networks Website is to increase interconnnectivity and information flow among Native media organizations, media producers, and their audiences. The Website project grew out of a series of public symposia, media maker workshops and informal activities during the 1995, 1997 and 2000 Native American Film and Video Festivals. "Native Networks" events at the festivals brought together the seventy or so media makers presenting works--in film, video, radio, television, and new media--to discuss ideas, discuss resources, and share concerns and interests. Media makers and media support organizations were also able to interact informally and get to know one another better. The Website is concerned with helping further these discussions. It is also a kind of "research" into what are the most useful site contents for the media makers who are its constituents.

Because about 40% of festival participants come from Latin America and 60% from the U.S. and Canada, festival workshops are presented, through simultaneous translation, in English, Spanish, and Portuguese, and, on occasion, in indigenous languages. On the Native Networks Website, we are starting with two language versions-English and Spanish. We are also concerning ourselves with how to make translation easier through free software, so that all the site users can read the site links in their own language as well (this is a BIG experiment!). Since at least one link is in Cherokee (it happens to have an English version too), we'll be exploring ways for people to present their ideas and represent their projects in their own community's language too. Because access to Internet technology varies greatly throughout the Americas, the Native Networks Website project will also be distributed outside of the Internet-on paper and on viewable CDs-and distributed through network "nodes" at Native centers throughout the hemisphere.

In November 2000, Hello Design was hired to design the Native Networks Website. Two representatives attended the NMAI Film and Video Festival 2000 to gain a better sense of the complexity of the constituency base and to learn more about the work being done by contemporary Native media makers.

For the initial review of design concepts, the Film and Video Center enlisted a number of constituents to view and comment on the general design and palette of the Website samples. Through the use of an extranet site, staff of the Film and Video Center worked with the designers to develop a number of functional templates. This process involved a lot of hard work by all parties involved.

Thanks for Support

Native Networks Website would not be possible without generous support of the organizations that have helped the Film and Video Center develop the content and ideas we present here, years before the site was planned, in our public programs and information services, production projects and support for the field of Native American media.

The Native Networks Website initiative was made possible when The Ford Foundation's Media and Culture Program reached out to four separate Native Internet projects in 1998, and included this proposed Website for funding. Developing a vision for the site would not have happened without the foundation's John Phillip Santos and then-program assistant Bird Running Water, who gave us the opportunity to transform the Native American Film and Video Festival in 1997 to a complex event fully reflective of the diversity of Native American media. Out of this experience, our conversations led us to the creation of a Website to incorporate many of the goals of the festival events. For assisting us in expanding our work in both these ways, the Film and Video Center is very grateful.

The festival has always been original and eventful, and a dynamic showcase for independent Native American media. The funders who helped us initiate all the various works we have set out to do in public programs and in information services are the Media Arts Programs of the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts and the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, all of whom returned to supporting us year after year, and helped us build the ideas that underpin our determination to produce this site. For their sustained support of the festival and other FVC projects we are very grateful.

Since 1990 the festival and other projects have been supported by additional funders interested in the FVC's focus on international outreach and Native community media. Over the years we have shown works and hosted producers in film, video and radio from Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Canada, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico and Panama, as well as Native Alaska and Hawai'i. Support from the Smithsonian's Latino Initiative Fund, US/Mexico Fund, Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, The Canada Council, Mexican Cultural Institute of New York, Alaska State Council on the Arts, and Varig Airlines have permitted us to bring together travelers from great distances so that the Native media world could use our museum as its meeting place and also to regularly show the public here the best newest Native work. This has been a great privilege and learning experience, and for the support that has made this possible we are very grateful.

In 2001 we launch the pilot of Native Networks Website. We have tried to provide interesting new information, lots of links, and a chance to know about Native media endeavors. Wherever possible we have provided in plain language the technical information accessing the site may require. We look forward to hearing from its users-from you-and hope you'll enjoy yourself while here.

Funding and Support

Native Networks Website

  • The Ford Foundation

Native Networks Workshops and Festivals

Funders:

  • The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
  • New York State Council on the Arts (NYSCA)
  • Latino Initiative Pool
  • The Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade
  • The Canada Council
  • Alaska State Council on the Arts
  • Channel 13 - WNET

Participating Media Organizations:

  • Aboriginal Film and Video Alliance of Ontario
  • Association of Independent Video & Filmmakers (AIVF)
  • Banff Center for the Arts, Aboriginal Program
  • Film/Video Arts
  • Native American Producers Alliance (NAPA)
  • Native American Public Telecommunications (NAPT)
  • Native Media Resources Center (NMRC)
  • New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA)
  • NYU Program in Culture, Media and History
  • NY Women in Film and Television
  • Thundergulch

Other Support

Native Networks Website is a project developed and produced by NMAI's Film and Video Center staff, contractors, and interns, in association with a technical review team of NMAI Internet staff and Native Internet producers. The pilot site designs were circulated to numerous Native American media makers interested in the site idea. As it develops, Native Networks will continue to look to all these sources of input and criticism to enable the site to serve a large and diverse constituency and audience.

Website Reviewers
The following have given generously of time and ideas. However, anything overlooked or in error is entirely the responsibility of the Website staff.

  • Jane Sledge
  • Cheryl Wilson
  • John Dwight
  • Jim May
  • Marty de Montaño
  • David Bridge
  • Robert Gemmell
  • Melanie Printup Hope
  • Marrie Mumford

We also wish to express our gratitude to the many individual media makers who discussed the site with us at the 2000 Native American Film and Video Festival and via email.

Contributors

Designers

  • Hello Design -David Lai, Szu Ann Chen, Kendrick Lim, and Jolene Niwa

Technical Support

  • Mimi Scharf
  • Ryan Jacobs
  • Michael Tuttle and the rest of the Web Services Division of SI-OIT

Legal Counsel

  • Bruce A. Falk, Contract Negotiator, Office of Contracting, Smithsonian Institution

Administrative Support

  • Joy Brewster (Shinnecock/Montaukett/Cherokee)

Project Proposal and Planning 1997 - 1999

  • Ruth von Goeler
  • Erica Cusi Wortham

Image Credits

Please refer to the bottom of individual pages.

Flash Graphic

  • Backbone of the World
    Courtesy Pam Roberts
  • Keepers of the Fire
    Courtesy Christine Welsh
  • Kayapo man with video camera at meeting to object to dams on the Xingu River.
    Courtesy Murilo Santos
  • Starting Fire with Gunpowder
    Courtesy First Run/Icarus Films
  • The Gift
    Courtesy of the National Film Board of Canada
  • Kinaaldá
    Courtesy Lena Carr
  • Harlan McKosato, "Native America Calling" Host Drumbeat for Mother Earth
    Courtesy Joe Di Gangi/Amon Giebel
  • Women at radio board Finding My Talk
    Courtesy Paul Rickard
  • Alberto Muenala (Quichua) and crew
    Courtesy Guillermo Monteforte
  • Editing Workshop (Mexico)
    Courtesy Guillermo Monteforte

Non-Flash Graphic

  • Backbone of the World
    Courtesy Pam Roberts

Image credit: 2000 Native American Film and Video Festival - Photograph by Georgetta Stonefish, NMAI

Welcome to Native Networks

Mission Statement

Visitor Information

Website Staff

Off-line Access

Project History

Thanks for Support

Funding and Support

Other Support

Image Credits


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