Charlene — Teters

In her seventies now, Teters continues to paint, teach, and speak. Her recent works have turned toward environmental justice, connecting the desecration of Native land to the desecration of Native bodies and symbols. The through-line remains clear: all extraction—of oil, of images, of identity—is one act. And standing against it, in silent witness or in vibrant paint, is the artist’s highest calling. Charlene Teters did not set out to be a symbol. She set out to be a mother protecting her children’s reflection in the world. In doing so, she became a mirror for America—one that reflects not what we want to see, but what we must, at last, acknowledge.

That question became the engine of her life. She began standing silently outside the university’s football stadium, holding a sign that read “Indians Are Human Beings.” She was met with mockery—fans threw beer and bones at her, chanted “Scalp her!”—but she refused to move. This was not a political calculation; it was a mother’s instinct. Teters understood that the mascot debate was not about a name; it was about a pedagogy. Every tomahawk chop taught non-Native children that Indigenous people were extinct, cartoonish, or a costume to be worn. It taught Native children that their sacred regalia—the eagle feather, the war bonnet—held no more meaning than a foam finger. charlene teters

Her solitary protest grew into a national movement, culminating in her powerful testimony before the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights and her starring role in the 1994 documentary In Whose Honor? But where many activists would have rested, Teters saw the mascot as only the most visible symptom of a deeper disease: the colonizer’s need to possess the Native image. If protest was Teters’ voice, art was her language. Her studio practice moves beyond polemic into the realm of the sacred and the spectral. She works in multiple media—painting, sculpture, beadwork, and large-scale installation—but a single, haunting theme unites her oeuvre: the absent presence of Indigenous people in the American psyche. In her seventies now, Teters continues to paint,

Privacy Settings

The Privacy Notice is a document that defines how personal information is handled in connection with the use of this service. This service includes the smartphone applications and websites listed below.

  • ● Yu-Gi-Oh! Neuron
  • ● Yu-Gi-Oh! Neuron(KONAMI CARD GAME NETWORK)
  • ● Yu-Gi-Oh! Neuron(TRADING CARD GAME CARD DATABASE)
  • ● Yu-Gi-Oh! Neuron(RUSH DUEL CARD DATABASE)

This document outlines the handling of location information used in features such as store search and tournament search.

Privacy Settings

Is this setting okay?

Privacy Notice

Before Change : Agree Decline

After Change : Agree Decline

Regarding Features That Use Precise Geolocation Data

Before Change : Agree Decline

After Change : Agree Decline

Withdrawal of Privacy Notice

If you withdraw your consent to the Privacy Notice, Yu-Gi-Oh! Neuron will no longer be available.
If you wish to withdraw, please proceed with the deletion process for your CARD GAME ID.

To delete your ID, log in to Yu-Gi-Oh! Neuron(KONAMI CARD GAME NETWORK) and go to My Page > About CARD GAME ID deletion on this site to withdraw your consent to the Privacy Notice and delete your personal information.