Tomson Highway to perform at Native Arts Day

[img_inline align=”right” src=”http://padnws01.mcmaster.ca/images/storybeforetime.jpg” caption=”Mohawk choreographer and McMaster alumna Santee Smith will debut several dances from her upcoming production A Story Before Time as part of Native Arts Day,”]Tomson Highway, the internationally celebrated and award-winning playwright, will make a rare appearance in Canada as part of Ogwahsroni, a day-long symposium on Thursday, Nov. 8 focusing on Native Arts.
Highway, who now makes his home in Europe, will talk about his work and perform several pieces under the title How to Make Lemonade Without Getting Too Tired. The inspiration sprang, he says, from the adage that “when you're handed a lemon for a life what do you do? You make lemonade.”
Opening for Highway will be acclaimed Mohawk choreographer and McMaster alumna Santee Smith, who will debut several dances from her upcoming production A Story Before Time, the Iroquois creation legend, to be performed in a lavish production in December in Toronto.
Ogwahsroni is Cayuga for “we all made it,” explained Dawn Martin-Hill, director of the Indigenous Studies Program at McMaster University.
“First Nations do not view art as an expression of the individual but as an expression of the collective. In this sense, Native Arts Day is a show of our shared creative spirit.”
Ogwahsroni will begin with a show and sale of Native art organized by the McMaster First Nation Student Association in the rotunda of the McMaster University Student Centre from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. It will feature a variety of arts, including basket weaving, Iroquoian pottery, paintings and fine jewelry. Raymond Skye will speak about his inspiration for his Iroquian artwork.
In the afternoon, art historian Armand Ruffo will give a lecture on the painting legacy of Norval Morrisseau. Ruffo's talk will begin at 4 p.m. in McMaster University's Council Chambers, Gilmour Hall, Room 111 followed by Highway's and Smith's performances at 7 p.m.
The full program can be found at here