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A traveling exhibit at the High Desert Museum in Bend depicts an early 20th century Oregon lumber town with a difference: The company there employed both Black and white loggers.
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Historically, museums across the U.S. have taken a detached, scholarly, and archaic view of Native Americans. But over the past decade especially, there’s been a push by Native advocates and their supporters to “decolonize” -- or alternately, “Indigenize” – these institutions, including here in Oregon.
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A bobcat who arrived at the High Desert Museum in Bend as a small kitten is now a full-grown cat and has been named Timber.
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Bend’s High Desert Museum has a new, young river otter in its exhibit. But experts would rather have been able to release him back to his family.
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This is Sandy Brown Jensen, and you’re listening to Viz City, KLCC’s arts review program. When the heat started to come on last week, we were kayaking for…
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While the business of art is always in flux, the Indigenous art community may see more dramatic change than most. As part of our series “Native Oregon…