Those bowls with zigzags and rosettes are fantastic!
@GlobalIndigenousFoundation-k2v18 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@couvduck6029 күн бұрын
Very interesting presentation. Makes me definitely want to know more about this artist.
@powerkorАй бұрын
Groovy
@ericthurston7152Ай бұрын
Great job. Edmonia Lewis needs to be honored more. Death of Cleopatra should have treated with more respect as well as her creator.
@wilyouwontyou2 ай бұрын
But, how about showing the final result?!
@ravendreaming39662 ай бұрын
Oh, shit, Maiwa! I buy my natural dye powders from them.
@ravendreaming39662 ай бұрын
I wish I could've seen the show!! Watching this while working on a quilt.
@hiimdaisy9463 ай бұрын
What's the name of the song?
@d1i2a3n4n5e64 ай бұрын
A horrible person who took homes from people - a true woman hero is Suzette Kelo who took her ass to the supreme court. Read The Little Pink House. It will blow your mind.
@johnbarrymore58274 ай бұрын
Thank You
@PadmaCharanMajhi5 ай бұрын
thank you so much.......its very notable....
@lynnhubbard8445 ай бұрын
his son is no public speaker...I saw him speak at his father's exhibition in Vienna...stumbled and fumbled the whole way through...I cannot watch this anymore
@Owl3505 ай бұрын
The people in Arkansas who are part Caucasian are still American Indians .
@rossjohnson11996 ай бұрын
Fantastic, a great doco.
@penelopecho376 ай бұрын
Wonderful teaching!!
@rahuls87646 ай бұрын
They sure loved their lapaslazly 😊
@darrendazcox6 ай бұрын
Didn't you see your own Rothko in the sunlight? I did and there's no window to inner life, the brush strokes just add to the individuality but it's not about the artist at all, you can't get the point of a color field "classic sectional" if you try to think - you can barely see the canvas when the effect of being enveloped in the color kicks in, all these other bits and pieces you are adding appear to be filler - it's JUST an experiment in color, period end of story - Rubens already was using the same idea but he could actually paint real things, Rothko, after being lauded as a genius for discovering the obvious then appears to have just blobbed random stuff knowing you guys would eat it up as you made up a whole narrative that invented all the other things - some expert, more like a salesman.
@Flux_One7 ай бұрын
What an amazing dude. On par with Kerry James Marshall
@OVTraveller7 ай бұрын
When will people realise that sea side ancient cities have not sunk, it is the seas that have risen since the end of the Ice Age when kilometre thickness of ice started melting. Places like Alexandria located on a low lying delta would have been seriously affected and slipped under as the Mediterranean Sea rose probably tens of metres in the last 5 thousand year.
@MrGaborseres7 ай бұрын
Utterly fascinating 😮👍 Thanks for bringing it to us 👍
@divinelypurposed68517 ай бұрын
Have you uncovered research on Ananke/Adrasteia?
@JakeWilsonMMA8 ай бұрын
Our government and the history of our country is of greed and evil
@JakeWilsonMMA8 ай бұрын
I am EMBARRASSED TO BE WHITE AND YOU SHOULD BE TO TBH
As a Wichita resident my first home had an abstract (deed) dating all the way back to time of Osage ownership. This dates back to where the Plat of Wichita was originally laid out. I’m not sure of the exact date, but somewhere around 1860’s.
@Happy_HIbiscus9 ай бұрын
the osage😊😊😊😊
@user-xc4gy6ki8o9 ай бұрын
Very interesting.
@ElizabethCzichos-ym9vr9 ай бұрын
Wonderful trip, having a copy myself, it's fantastic to bring this to life. ✌️💛🎃
@user-xc4gy6ki8o9 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@LindaMerchant-bq2hp9 ай бұрын
History's first city's first language of the cuneiform 3,900 years before christ walked the earth
@LindaMerchant-bq2hp9 ай бұрын
Legendary sumeria
@cattymajiv4 ай бұрын
The name is Sumer, not Sumeria. The people were Sumerians. Just like there are Canadians and Italians, but no Canadia or Italia. There are Peruvians, but no Peruvia. Brazilians but no Brazilia, and many more.
@gavinp65659 ай бұрын
So much interdisciplinary insight delivered by Hu, and with a beautiful articulation! Thank you for sharing :)
@ericschmuecker3489 ай бұрын
My people call it corn.
@ingridllinas56129 ай бұрын
So good to listen from their own voice about their culture and the appreciation they have for a better tomorrow. The handcrafts and patterns showed are beautiful.
@cliffwoodbury531910 ай бұрын
digital rendering would be cool to see what life would be like in a city like this
@cliffwoodbury531910 ай бұрын
Modern Hobbit Living .... This is a very interesting and different way of living and it seemed like he had it all figured out; sounds like it might work as a different way of living at the least, and maybe a better way of living. I see things that could be tweaked (mass transit - smaller busses) and I wonder if a nation that had towns and cities like this along with the best system of what we have/how we live because it is obvious that most urban areas before WW2 were far better build in design/zoning than they are today.
@TWOCOWS110 ай бұрын
Fabulous production. Thank you. I am wondering how deep those pits were that he dug? Peoples/diggers are descending into those pits on several layers of stairs. Seem to be at least 70 feet deep. How did he guess the existence of such tombs so deep into the ground??
@bonitab788111 ай бұрын
Beautiful!!! It's been said that a picture is worth a thousand words, but your Artistic performance spoke volumes as well! Thank you 🥰👌🏽
@bonitab788111 ай бұрын
WOW!!!! Powerful!!! Thank you for such a brilliant Artistic interpretation of your vision!!! 🔥💥💯👋🏾🙏🏽😓