Cherokee Storytelling – with Kim Shuck and Mary Jean Robertson

Please join Kim Shuck and Mary Jean Robertson for an afternoon of Cherokee Storytelling.

Saturday, September 16, 1 – 3pm

Artists’ Television Access (ATA)
992 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA

This event is FREE and open to the public. We’ll have snacks and beverages available.

Please wear masks if you can.


Mary Jean Robertson serves on the San Francisco Native Community advisory council. She is currently writing a book about American Indians in Radio. She was chosen to represent  the Cherokee Society of the Greater Bay Area at the annual conference of the Cherokee Nation’s “At large” community. In 1972 Robertson attended San Francisco State College to learn from the American Indian Studies Program. In 1973 she was asked to join the “Red Voices” radio collective on the radio station that was run by the  students who had been part of the SFSC’s Third World Liberation Front’s media committee, KPOO. She has been producing Voices of the Native Nations on KPOO for 50 years.

 

Kim Shuck embraces the fool and jester qualities of being a modern poet and artist. She is a devotee of San Francisco, whose hills she wanders nearly always on foot. Her maternal grandparents met at the Polish Hall on Shotwell and she spent many hours with her mother and grandmother wandering the Mission St. Miracle Mile, taking books out of the Mission Branch library and watching aquarium fish on the ground floor of what used to be Hale’s. She firmly believes in carrying a bubble wand, keys, pen and notebook and cats cradle string at all times. Shuck is widely published in journals, anthologies and a couple of solo books. She enjoys volunteering in SFUSD elementary school classrooms to share her loves of origami, poetry and basket making… in other words, math of various kinds. In 2019 Shuck was awarded an inaugural National Laureate Fellowship from the Academy of American Poets, and a PEN Oakland Censorship Award. Kim served as the 7th Poet Laureate of San Francisco. As a visual artist, apart from receiving an MFA in textiles, Shuck is primarily a regalia maker, which means that while her work is rarely shown in galleries, it is danced in ceremony at events across the United States. She is particularly proud of the dance regalia she’s created for two-spirit people.