Smithsonian Folklife Festival records: 2000 Smithsonian Folklife Festival
Object Details
- Scope and Contents note
- This collection documents the planning, production, and execution of the 2000 Smithsonian Folklife Festival. Materials may include photographs, audio recordings, motion picture film and video recordings, notes, production drawings, contracts, memoranda, correspondence, informational materials, publications, and ephemera. Such materials were created during the Festival on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., as well as in the featured communities, before or after the Festival itself.
- Historical note
- The Festival of American Folklife, held annually since 1967 on the National Mall in Washington, D.C., was renamed the Smithsonian Folklife Festival in 1998. The 2000 Smithsonian Folklife Festival was produced by the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage and cosponsored by the National Park Service. For more information, see Smithsonian Folklife Festival records.
- Date
- June 23-July 4, 2000
- Extent
- 1 Cubic foot (approximate)
- Rights
- Permission to publish materials from the collection must be requested from the Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections. Please visit our website to learn more about submitting a request. The Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections make no guarantees concerning copyright or other intellectual property restrictions. Other usage conditions may apply; please see the Smithsonian's Terms of Use for more information.
- Citation
- Smithsonian Folklife Festival records: 2000 Smithsonian Folklife Festival, Ralph Rinzler Folklife Archives and Collections, Smithsonian Institution.
- Type
- Collection descriptions
- Archival materials
- Negatives
- Correspondence
- Business records
- Audiocassettes
- Slides (photographs)
- Memorandums
- Videotapes
- Contracts
- Notes
- Plans (drawings)
- Photographic prints
- Audiotapes
- Digital images
- Sound recordings
- Video recordings
- Topic
- Food habits
- arts and crafts
- World music
- Folklore
- Folk music
- Folk art
- Folk festivals
- Identifier
- CFCH.SFF.2000
- Introduction
- The goal of the Smithsonian Folklife Festival is to present diverse, community-based traditions in an understandable and respectful way. The great strength of the Festival is to connect the public, directly and compellingly, with practitioners of cultural traditions. In 2000, the Festival featured programs on the cultural ecology of the Río Grande/Río Bravo Basin, on Tibetan refugee culture, and on the local traditions of Washington, D.C. Visitors could learn how a cowboy or vaquero from South Texas works cattle, or speak with a Tibetan American immigrant about the meaning underlying her continued practice of sacred traditions. As an artist's hand guided the eyes of Festival viewers, they could imagine how an urban mural reflects life in Washington, D.C. The Festival program on the cultures of Washington, D.C., showed the vibrancy of local communities that live in the shadow of national institutions. El Río demonstrated the tenacity of regional culture at the borders, even margins, of Mexico and the United States. The program on Tibetan refugees provided a cultural in-gathering of a diaspora community facing issues of continuity and survival - climaxed by a huge ceremony on the National Mall presided over by His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama, who also offered a public address on the occasion. Overall, the Festival this year demonstrated that, while people may be subject to modern forms of colonization, to unequal power and economic arrangements, and to marginalization, exile, and strife in many forms, they use their cultural traditions as sources of strength, resistance, and creativity to cope with and overcome their travail. Culture, after all, is a means of human adaptation. Just because people may be economically poor or politically powerless does not necessarily mean that their cultures are brittle or bereft of value. The Festival has long had an especially significant impact on those artists, musicians, cooks, and ritual specialists who participate directly in it. The attention they receive usually fortifies their intent to pass on their traditions to children, apprentices, and students, just as it sometimes encourages cultural exemplars to extend their creativity by connecting it to broader civic and economic issues. The Festival's rich cultural dialogue on the National Mall was considered to be particularly significant for American civic life at the dawn of the 21st century, as we enter an era in which no single racial or ethnic group will be a majority. The Festival allows a broad array of visitors to understand cultural differences in a civil, respectful, and educational way. Little wonder it has become a model for public cultural presentation, adopted by organizations elsewhere in the United States and in other democratic nations. The 2000 Festival took place during two five-day weeks (June 23-27 and June 30-July 4) between Madison Drive and Jefferson Drive and between 9th Street and 14th Street, south of the National Museum of American History and the National Museum of Natural History (see site plan). It featured three programs, with several special events including the Ralph Rinzler Memorial Concert. The 2000 Program Book included schedules and participant lists for each program; essays provided background on the Festival and on each of the programs. The Festival was co-presented by the Smithsonian Institution and National Park Service and organized by the Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage. Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage Richard Kurin, Director; Richard Kennedy, Deputy Director; Diana Parker, Festival Director; Anthony Seeger, Director, Smithsonian Folkways Recordngs; James Early, Director, Cultural Heritage Policy; Thomas Vennum, Jr., Senior Ethnomusicologist; Olivia Cadaval, Chair, Research & Education; D.A. Sonneborn, Assistant Director, Smithsonian Folkways Recordings; Betty J. Belanus, Nancy Groce, Marjorie Hunt, Diana Baird N'Diaye, Peter Seitel, Cynthia Vidaurri, Curators, Folklorists, Education and Cultural Specialists; Carla M. Borden, Program/Publications Manager; John W. Franklin, Program Manager; Cynthia Vidaurri, Coordinator, Latino Cultural Resource Network; Jeffrey Place, Archivist; Stephanie Smith, Assistant Archivist; Arlene L. Reiniger, Program Specialist; Charlie Weber, Media Specialist; Zain Abdullah, Stanford Carpenter, Susan T. Chen, Roland Freeman, Dan Goodwin, Todd Harvey, Amy Horowitz, Ivan Karp, Guy Logsdon, Alan Lomax, Worth Long, René López, Kate Rinzler, Katherine Skinner, Saul Tobias, Bob White, Fellows & Research Associates Folklife Advisory Council and Folkways Advisory Council Michael Asch, Phyllis Barney, Jane Beck, Don DeVito, Pat Jasper, Ella Jenkins, Jon Kertzer, Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, John Nixdorf, Bernice Johnson Reagon, Gilbert Sprauve, Jack Tchen, Ricardo Trimillos National Park Service Robert Stantion, Director; Terry Carlstrom, Director, National Capital Region
- Shared Stewardship of Collections
- The Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage acknowledges and respects the right of artists, performers, Folklife Festival participants, community-based scholars, and knowledge-keepers to collaboratively steward representations of themselves and their intangible cultural heritage in media produced, curated, and distributed by the Center. Making this collection accessible to the public is an ongoing process grounded in the Center's commitment to connecting living people and cultures to the materials this collection represents. To view the Center's full shared stewardship policy, which defines our protocols for addressing collections-related inquiries and concerns, please visit https://doi.org/10.25573/data.21771155.
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EAD Collection Results
- Festival Recordings: Tibetan Opera: Bylakuppe Lhamo Troupe, Traditional and Contemporary Song and Dance of Tibet: Chaksampa
- Festival Recordings: Ethiopian Cooking
- Festival Recordings: Dance and Chant: Shung sep Nuns, Buddhist Discourse Lama Pema Wongdak
- Festival Recordings: Traditional and Contemporary Song and Dance: Chaksampa (Sonam Tashi), Institution of the Dali Lama (Gyatso Tsering, Rinchen Dharlo, Kalden Lodoe) (Richen Dharlo)
- El Rio fieldwork: Interview with Arnold Herrera
- Festival Recordings: Unspoken Heard (Michael Abbott, Teak 1, Asher u, Blue Black) (Lisa Pegram), Michelle Banks, Quique Aviles and Friends
- Festival Recordings: Lajazz: Afro Latin (Darius Scott, Bob Balthis, Bhaywan, Cliff Bigoney, Don Junkar, Paul Hawkins, Sam Turner, Rudy Morales, Tom Monroe (Jenifer Payne), Sweet Hone in the Rock (Jenifer Payne), Archie Edwards Blues heritage Foundation (Jennifer Payne)
- Festival Recordings: Jewish Cooking
- Festival Recordings: Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts, Traditional and Contemporary Son: Chaksampa (Sorum), Tibetan Opera: Bylakuppe Lhamo Troupe
- Festival Recordings: Neighborhood Memories (Gloria Harris, Lorraine Moore, Earl Simpson, Lloyd Smith) (George Koch), Carnival Here and There (George Bellegazde, Dorotea Bryce, Non Martin, Lian Smaar) (Camila Bryce), Archie Edwards Blues Heritage Foundation (Michael Bayron, Napolean Brunorok, Elkarde Ellis, Jeff Glassay) (Michael Bayrop)
- Festival Recordings: Los Canarios: El Rio, Nuevo Leon (Hector Guerrero), Los Folklorists de Nuevo Mexico, Los Fantasmas Del Valle (James Early)
- Fieldwork
- El Rio exhibition video: Shrimpers and South Texas Cowboys (audio from video for transcription)
- Festival Recordings: Group from Dharamsala, India: Tibetan Institute of Performing arts (Jamyang Dorjee), Traditional and Contemporary Song: Chaksampa (Sonam Tashi), Tibetan Opera: Bylakuppe Lhamo Troupe (Pempa Tsering)
- Festival Recordings: Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts, Traditional and Contemporary Son: Chaksampa (Tashi Ohondup Sharzur), Traditional Song and dance: Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts (Jamyang Dorjee Tipa), Tibetan Folk Songs (Loten Namling)
- Festival Recordings: Poets Corner (Quique Ariles, Joel Dios, Porter Ernesto Mercer) (Lisa Pegram)
- Festival Recordings: Religious Storytelling: Jhurme (Geshe Lobsang Tenzin), Weaving Traditions (Tashi Dolma, Lobsang Yarphei) (Sonam Tensing), Tibetan Folk Songs: Loten Namling
- Festival Recordings: Natural Rasources and Built Environment (Snra Jimenez, Maricela Castillo) (Victor Hernandez), Music, Land, and Water Rights (Cipriano Vigil, Lorenzo Gonzalez, Cipriano Vigil Jr.) (C Vidaurri)
- Festival Recordings: Los Fantasmas (Julio Figuero, Craz Gonzalez, Hector Barron, Rodney Rodriguez) (Ramon de Leon), Los Canarios: Nuevo Leon (Cirilo Saucedo, Ramon Maduyano), Los Folkloristas de Nuevo Mexico (Lorenzo Gonzalez, Cipriano Vigil, Jr, Felicita Vigil) (James Early)
- Festival Recordings: Los Folklorists de Nuevo Mexico, Los Fantasmas Del Valle (Ramon De Leon, Tonne Vennum), Trio Tamaulipaco (David Garcia)
- Festival Recordings: Good Food (Robert Egger, Ayo Hardy Keidi, John Franklin)
- Festival Recordings: East of the River Boys and Girls Steel Band (Gary Fisher, Antwan Nivens) (Sandra Banton), DC, Tibet Stonecarving (Constantine Seferlis, Andy Segerlis, Awang Dorjee) (Marjorie Hunt), Poetry in Motion: DC Hand Dancing (Antonio Brunton, Nell Haller, Lisa Lowes, Levet Brown) (Beverley Lindsey), Neighborhood Memories (Pat Belcher, Wendy Bogart, Carl Kessler, Barbra Simons) (John Franklin)
- Festival Recordings: Blues: Nap Turner (Lionel Thomas), Poetry the MC Opus Akoben (Opus Akoben), Smooth and Easy Hand Dancing (Beverley Lindsay), Song Slam: Reverb in Process (Tia Ade, Naketia Agyeman, Paula Pree, Pam Mickolly)
- Festival Recordings: Shugsep Nuns, Chants and Debate, Bon Traditions