Laura Anderson Barbata, " 21st Century Living in the Amazon: In the Order of Chaos" 10/27/2010
Laura Anderson Barbata worked with the Yanomami people of the Venezuelan Amazon Rainforest, teaching them to make paper and books so they could write their own history. Their first book Shapono tells the story of the gods Omawe and Yoawe who taught the Yanomami how to build their home as a communal dwelling. Contact with outsiders has brought with it industrialized materials and solutions integrated by the Yanomami into their building techniques, homes and lifestyle, posing new challenges and problems for traditional tight-knit communities. Barbata will also discuss her project, Moko Jumbies, which has engaged at-risk youth in in Trinidad and Tobago in the practice of an ancient tradition in community-driven cultural activities to support a strong sense of identity. Barbata is a professor at the Escuela Nacional de Escultura, Pintura y Grabado La Esmeralda of the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes, México.
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2010 Fall Lecture Series: Give Me Shelter: second skin for extreme environments?
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