KU Powwow brings family, tribal representation and celebration inside the Lied Center

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Dancers took the celebration onto the Lied Center stage for the 37th KU Powwow, honoring family, tribal representation and the circle of life. 

Saturday’s event began with the Powwow 101 by Jancita Warrington, who is of Potawatomi, Menominee, and Ho-Chunk descent.

The presentation acted as a crash course that touched on every core musical aspect of a powwow.

“The drum is what we consider the heartbeat of the people,” Warrington said.

Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times Jancita Warrington presents Powwow 101 to an audience of nearly 100 attendees prior to the start of the 37th KU Powwow. Warrington touched on a plethora of topics during the presentation, including tribal dances, songs made by Native artists, roles in a powwow such as head man and lady, and more.
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Concerns of storms pushed the KU powwow indoors, but it didn’t stop the grass, traditional, fancy and jingle dancers.

Echo Long Soldier-Sitting Bear, Oglala-Lakota Sioux, a 26-year-old grass dancer from South Dakota, said that dancing in the circle comes from his heart.

Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times Echo Long Soldier-Sitting Bear, Oglala-Lakota Sioux, is a 26-year-old grass dancer from South Dakota. He returned from serving with the U.S. Marine Corp a month ago, and this year’s was his first KU Powwow. “I just want to keep doing this and hope that I can do it for a long time while I’m on this earth,” he said.

“We do it for our ancestors. We do it for the circle of lives,” Long Soldier-Sitting Bear said. “Dancing to the beat of the drum, which mimics the heart, the čanté, so just doing that means more than anything to me and to my mom, too. I love doing this for her too.”

24-year-old Southern Cloth dancer Arianna Long, Cheyenne and Arapaho, said she was also excited to represent her family in the circle.

Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times Arianna Long, Cheyenne and Arapaho, 24, in the women’s traditional dance. Long is a southern cloth dancer, which is a form of women’s traditional dance.

“I was raised by women, Arapaho women, and being out there, it just feels very humbling because I get to dance and represent my people,” Long said. 

“… My grandma has sisters who made my beadwork, my dresses, and they all support me, and I love them so much. And knowing that I’m out there dancing and representing their work, it just makes me really happy.”

Workshops and presentations that were part of the ninth annual Indigenous Cultures Festival filled the rest of the Lied Center. 

Attendees made beaded pouches with artist Phillip Pursel, Ioway, and beaded lanyards with artist Tara Mitchell, Prairie Band Potawatomi, in smaller rooms spread throughout the center.

Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times Tara Mitchell, Prairie Band Potawatomi (right), teaches an attendee how to make a beaded lanyard. Mitchell has been teaching students how to make beaded lanyards since 2017. She first learned back in kindergarten.

Mitchell and her mom taught the workshop together, and Mitchell said they regularly pray when making the beadwork to keep positive energy going into the work.

Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times Christina Berger beads a lanyard in Tara Mitchell’s beaded lanyard workshop.

“We believe that when all those thoughts and stuff that are going into that work, the person who is going to wear it, or receives it, is going to feel what you’re feeling,” Mitchell said. 

Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times The audience stands after emcee Manny King requested them to before the beginning of a prayer and the flag song in the Lied Center main auditorium.
Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times Dancers enter the circle during the first Grand Entry ceremony.
Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times A fancy shawl dancer’s feet touch the ground during the first Grand Entry.
Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times Fancy dancer Joe Bointy, Kiowa, Comanche, Arapaho, enters the circle during the first Grand Entry.
Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times Grass dancer Merlin Fletcher, Cheyenne Arapaho, 20, enters the circle during the first Grand Entry at the 37th KU Powwow.
Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times The Lied Center main lobby at the 37th KU Powwow. The lobby acted as a hub for art vendors.
Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times Earrings for sale from Joel Iron Shooter, Navajo and Sicangu Lakota, in the Lied Center lobby.
Logan Pierson / Lawrence Times A cook from Peaches’ Frybread makes fresh frybread outside of the Lied Center.

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Logan Pierson (he/him), reporting intern with The Lawrence Times since December 2025, is a senior journalism and photography student at the University of Kansas. He previously contributed to the University Daily Kansan as a senior reporter and beat reporter.

Read his work for the Times here.

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KU Powwow brings family, tribal representation and celebration inside the Lied Center

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Dancers took the celebration onto the Lied Center stage Saturday for the 37th KU Powwow, honoring family, tribal representation and the circle of life. 

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