January Third Thursday Book Event
George Morrison: Modern Artist]
Third Thursday
Author Series
Presented in Partnership with Minnesota Humanities Center
January 15, 2026 | 6:30p - 7:30p
MMAM, Oberton Education Room
Tickets:
General Admission $10
MMAM Member Rate: $5
Minnesota Humanities Center Rate: $5
Student Rate: Free
MMAM Gallery admission sold separately.
About the event:
Author Staci Drouillard and illustrator Tashia Hart will share their stories about how this book project was created as well as shed light on the incredible career of George Morrison, Grand Portage Anishinaabe artist, the subject of a major solo exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The Native American Lives Series, a joint publishing effort between the Minnesota Humanities Center and Lerner publishing, shares real life stories of Dakota and Ojibwe leaders, artists, activists, and elders who have been influential for their communities and have shaped Minnesota and national history. The series co-editors, Heid E. Erdrich and Gwen Nell Westerman share that “These children’s books are by, for, and about Dakota and Ojibwe people and will help Dakota, Ojibwe, and other Native American children imagine their own potential and help them see their cultures represented alongside biographies of American leaders in our society.” Presented in partnership with the Minnesota Humanities Center.
About the Authors
Staci Lola Drouillard
Staci Lola Drouillard is a Grand Portage Band of Ojibwe direct descendant. She lives and works in her hometown of Kitchibitobig—Grand Marais, on Minnesota’s North Shore of Lake Superior. Her first book Walking the Old Road: A People’s History of Chippewa City and the Grand Marais Anishinaabe (UMP, 2019) won the Hamlin Garland Prize in Popular History, the Northeastern Minnesota Book Award for nonfiction and was a finalist for a Minnesota Book Award. Her second book Seven Aunts (UMP, 2022) won the 2023 Minnesota Book Award for Memoir and Creative nonfiction, the Northeastern Minnesota Book Award and was a “Minnesota Reads” selection at the Library of Congress National Book Festival. A Family Tree, is her first children’s book and was illustrated by Kate Gardiner (Harper Collins, 2024). Staci is an award-winning radio producer for WTIP North Shore Community Radio and authors the monthly column Nibi Chronicles for Great Lakes Now, a branch of Detroit Public Media.
Tashia Hart
Tashia Hart is an author and illustrator; her works include Native Love Jams (2023), The Gooseberry Cookbook: Harvesting and Cooking Wild Rice and Other Wild Foods (2021), Gidjie and the Wolves (2020) and Girl Unreserved (2015). She was assistant illustrator for Gaa-pi-izhiwebak (2021) and illustrator for Gidjie and the Wolves (2020). Her short works include recipes, essays, poetry, and short stories for various publications. In addition to this title, she has also illustrated several of the books in this series. She is a citizen of the Red Lake Nation and resides in Duluth, MN.