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L Frank

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Nationality
  
Tongva-Acjachemen

Name
  
L. Frank

Role
  
Author


L. Frank L Frank Baum the real Wizard of Oz Telegraph


Full Name
  
L. Frank Manriquez

Known for
  
Patron(s)
  
News from Native California

Died
  
May 6, 1919, Hollywood, California, United States

Spouse
  
Maud Gage Baum (m. 1882–1919)

Movies
  
The Wizard of Oz, Oz the Great and Powerful

Books
  
The Wonderful Wizard of, The Marvelous Land of Oz, Ozma of Oz, The Road to Oz, Dorothy and the Wizard in

Similar People
  
Judy Garland, John R Neill, Lewis Carroll, Gregory Maguire, Ruth Plumly Thompson

Little boy blue l frank baum audiobook short story


L. Frank (born 1952) is the nom d'arte of L. Frank Manriquez, a Tongva-Acjachemen artist, writer, tribal scholar, cartoonist, and indigenous language activist. She lives and works in Santa Rosa, California.

Contents

L. Frank The Marvelous Land of Oz L Frank Baum

5 Things You Might Now Know About Author L. Frank Baum


Art

L. Frank L Frank Baum The Wizard of Hollywood Under the

In 1990, L. Frank was Artist in Residence at the Headland Center for the Arts in Sausalito, California; her artwork has been exhibited widely throughout California and appears in several publications.

Publications

L. Frank 4bpblogspotcomOjb5ibd8p3ETHAvD6AC5TIAAAAAAA

Her regular column/graphic, "Acorn Soup," has appeared in the quarterly newsletter News from Native California since 1992. "Acorn Soup" features the comic adventures of Coyote in his various guises: the Creator of the Universe and the Buffoon, the Trickster and the Tricked, always the Indian's Wise Fool. A selection of L. Frank's "Acorn Soup" cartoons have been collected and published in book form. Concerning L. Frank, one reviewer of the book at Amazon.com commented: "Introducing the Gary Larson of the Native American cartoon world!"

L. Frank First Person Radio June 15 L FRANK MANRIQUEZ Artist Writer

Another book, "First Families: Photographic History of California Indians" with co-author Kim Hogeland, was published in September 2006. It is an introduction to California’s native populations, with pictures such as the re-creation and sailing of the tii’at (a traditional Tongva/Gabrieleño canoe) off Catalina Island in 1995, to the 1918 picture of Kumeyaay men performing a sacred funerary dance with karuk (vision) dolls, to an image from 1932 of Salinans leading anthropologist J. P. Harrington on an expedition along California’s central coast. Each chapter covers a different region of California, with brief essays introducing the region’s cultures, histories, and contemporary life.

Community activism

L. Frank L Frank Manriquez We Are the Humanities YouTube

She is a Board Member of the California Indian Basketweavers Association and one of seven founding board members of the Advocates for Indigenous California Languages, organizations that are involved in the preservation and revival of Native Californian languages through traditional arts practice, language immersion, conferences and workshops.

L. Frank Black Butterfly A Creative Life The Art of L Frank Manriquez

She has won several awards for her activities, including from the American Association of University Women, the James Irvine Foundation, the Fund for Folk Culture (for travel to the Native Californian art collection at the Musée de l' Homme in Paris). In 1995 she was featured as a "Local Hero" in KQED-TV/Examiner Newspaper's Native American Heritage Month series. Frank is also active in the Two-Spirit culture educating and spreading awareness of issues.

L. Frank L Frank Manriquez National Bioneers Conference BioCon

In response to the Pope canonizing Juniper Serra, Frank with Corine Fairbanks and other members of the Indigenous community held several publicized rallies to bring to light the detrimental affect that the mission system had on California Indians.

L. Frank Black Butterfly A Creative Life The Art of L Frank Manriquez

In 2016, Frank built a traditional Tongva tule boat for Northwest Journeys, an intertribal event in Washington state, which was highlighted on the KCET channel. In the fall of that year, she was a speaker on Native American rights and the protection of the Earth at the Dakota Pipeline protest. She stated the media's coverage of the event has been misconstrued. "We don’t want violence of perceived violence to be what’s on the media."

References

L. Frank Wikipedia