Art heals: Via The Jingle Dress Project, Navajo artist honors lacking and murdered ladies

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Navajo artist and photographer Eugene Tapahe had a dream through the COVID-19 pandemic of ladies dancing in Yellowstone National Park in jingle attire, conventional pow wow regalia. From that dream, he began The Jingle Dress Project, images of his daughters and two of their buddies in varied settings, as a gesture of therapeutic and a method to convey consideration to the problem of lacking and murdered Indigenous ladies.

The exhibit is on the Monroe Gallery in Santa Fe, New Mexico, via September 28. Host Peter O’Dowd speaks with Tapahe and his daughter Dion Tapahe, who seems within the images.

This is a limited-edition image from the Art Heals: The Jingle Dress Project photo series. This image was captured at the Salt Flats in Utah, native land of the Goshute people. (Courtesy of Eugene Tapahe)
This is a limited-edition picture from the Art Heals: The Jingle Dress Project photograph collection. This picture was captured on the Salt Flats in Utah, homeland of the Goshute individuals. (Courtesy of Eugene Tapahe)
This limited-edition photograph was taken at Central Park in New York City, the native land of the Mohican, Wappinger, and Munsee Lenape people. (Courtesy of Eugene Tapahe)
This limited-edition {photograph} was taken at Central Park in New York City, the homeland of the Mohican, Wappinger, and Munsee Lenape individuals. (Courtesy of Eugene Tapahe)
This is a limited-edition image from the Art Heals: The Jingle Dress Project photo series. This image was captured at the Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, native land of the Newe Sogobia, Apsáalooke, and Tséstho’e people. (Courtesy of Eugene Tapahe)
This is a limited-edition picture from the Art Heals: The Jingle Dress Project photograph collection. This picture was captured on the Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming, homeland of the Newe Sogobia, Apsáalooke, and Tséstho’e individuals. (Courtesy of Eugene Tapahe)

This section aired on September 16, 2025.


This web page was created programmatically, to learn the article in its unique location you possibly can go to the hyperlink bellow:
https://www.wbur.org/hereandnow/2025/09/16/jingle-dress-project
and if you wish to take away this text from our web site please contact us

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