Downloadable Press Kit
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Conversations & Interviews
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Rosary Spence instructs a workshop at the Bata Shoe Museum in Toronto called Storyboot School. Through the classes, which are taught in partnership with Manitobah Mukluks, participants learn the art of making mukluks and moccasins.
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Rosary Spence, a Cree artist and designer, brings one-of-a-kind Aboriginal fashions to Calgary. Spence works with Manitobah Mukluks, a company that contracts artists from all across Canada to help keep Aboriginal traditions alive.
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Rosary Spence, Tamar Ilana, and Cotee Harper, speak with CBC Our Toronto leading up to Indigenous Grooves
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Rosary Spence from Manitobah Mukluks Storyboot Project made her tall Mukluk boots live on The Shopping Channel. Rosary shared the meaning behind the boot and the history of aboriginal art.
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Rosary Spence is a Cree artist and educator who narrates the Historica Canada Heritage Minute "Naskumituwin" (Treaty), highlighting the 1905–1906 signing of Treaty 9. She shares the story from the perspective of her great-grandfather, George Spence, an 18-year-old Cree witness who saw the promises made and subsequently broken by the government.
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Rosary Spence speaks about what it was like to have her images stolen and used on mass-produced products, and how she is now protecting her art through the Canadian Intellectual Property Office.
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