Native POP Partners with Vision Maker Media for Film Festival

Published July 19, 2019

RAPID CITY, S.D. — Vision Maker Media is honored to partner with Native POP: People of the Plains – A Gathering of Arts and Culture and SDPB to present the fourth annual Native Film Showcase, July 20 in Rapid City, South Dakota. Native POP is a Native art market and cultural celebration in the Black Hills.

Films will run from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m., at the South Dakota Public Broadcasting (SDPB) Black Hills Studio, 415 Main Street, Rapid City, SD. It will include documentaries of regional interest, as well as an opportunity for local filmmakers to show music videos, short films, and works in progress. Native POP takes place on Main Street Square, 526 Main Street, and the SDPB Black Hills Studio is a block away.

NATIVE POP: A GATHERING OF ARTS AND CULTURE from Angel Two Bulls on Vimeo.

The Black Hills premiere of RETURN: Native American Women Reclaim Foodways for Health and Spiritat 5 p.m. will feature a discussion with Kibbe McGaa Conti, a nutritionist at Rapid City Indian Health Service, who is featured in the film. The documentary is about empowering people to overcome their current circumstances through eating as their ancestors did — nutritiously and locally. RETURN explores the food-sovereignty movement occurring across the country through the stories of women championing the return to traditional food sources.
The Black Hills premiere of RETURN: Native American Women Reclaim Foodways for Health and Spiritat 5 p.m. will feature a discussion with Kibbe McGaa Conti, a nutritionist at Rapid City Indian Health Service, who is featured in the film. The documentary is about empowering people to overcome their current circumstances through eating as their ancestors did — nutritiously and locally. RETURN explores the food-sovereignty movement occurring across the country through the stories of women championing the return to traditional food sources.

The post Native POP Partners with Vision Maker Media for Film Festival appeared first on Native News Online.