Categories
Entertainment

Mama's Boys! Leonardo DiCaprio, Michael Fassbender and More Actors Who Have Brought Their Moms to the Oscars

Leonardo DiCaprio, Irmelin Indenbirken

Jeff Vespa/WireImage

Moms make the best award show dates!

Just ask some of Hollywood’s hottest leading men who have all walked the red carpet at the Oscars with their mothers over the years. Back in 2014, The Revenant nominee Leonardo DiCaprio escorted his beautiful mom, Irmelin Indenbirken. Leo’s fellow Best Actor contender Michael Fassbendershared the same idea when he invited his favorite lady, mom Adele Fassbender, to the ceremony.

Mama’s boys Jared Leto, Bradley Cooper, Ryan Gosling, Matthew McConaugheyand Brad Pitt have also followed the trend in the past by attending the Academy Awards with their moms, and we can’t wait to see which A-listers will do the same tonight!

Before the arrivals, check out the gallery below to see more celeb moms who have been award show dates!

PHOTOS: See more stars and their moms at award shows

RELATED VIDEOS:

Source:: http://ca.eonline.com/news/742971/mama-s-boys-leonardo-dicaprio-michael-fassbender-and-more-actors-who-have-brought-their-moms-to-the-oscars?cmpid=rss-000000-rssfeed-365-topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories

      

Categories
Entertainment

Mama's Boys! Leonardo DiCaprio, Michael Fassbender and More Actors Who Have Brought Their Moms to the Oscars

Leonardo DiCaprio, Irmelin Indenbirken

Jeff Vespa/WireImage

Moms make the best award show dates!

Just ask some of Hollywood’s hottest leading men who have all walked the red carpet at the Oscars with their mothers over the years. Back in 2014, The Revenant nominee Leonardo DiCaprio escorted his beautiful mom, Irmelin Indenbirken. Leo’s fellow Best Actor contender Michael Fassbendershared the same idea when he invited his favorite lady, mom Adele Fassbender, to the ceremony.

Mama’s boys Jared Leto, Bradley Cooper, Ryan Gosling, Matthew McConaugheyand Brad Pitt have also followed the trend in the past by attending the Academy Awards with their moms, and we can’t wait to see which A-listers will do the same tonight!

Before the arrivals, check out the gallery below to see more celeb moms who have been award show dates!

PHOTOS: See more stars and their moms at award shows

RELATED VIDEOS:

Source:: http://ca.eonline.com/news/742971/mama-s-boys-leonardo-dicaprio-michael-fassbender-and-more-actors-who-have-brought-their-moms-to-the-oscars?cmpid=rss-000000-rssfeed-365-topstories&utm_source=eonline&utm_medium=rssfeeds&utm_campaign=rss_topstories

      

Categories
Politics

Cornhusk art reclaimed from craft to fine art

Cornhusk dolls

more stories from this episode

Tucked in a strip mall on the Six Nations of the Grand River, is a little store called Everything Cornhusk. It is owned by artist Elizabeth Doxtater who uses the traditional art of cornhusk dolls to create political statements.

“I call it reverse colonialism,” Doxtater said.

The Mohawk artist re-created three of Leonardo da Vinci’s paintings in the image of a cornhusk doll — Lady with an ErmineUnidentified Woman in a Red Dress and the Mona Lisa.  

Doxtater painted the three images that she calls the Three Sisters of Leonardo in acrylic and set them in an Iroquoian longhouse. The Three Sisters is a reference to the Iroquois method of agriculture where beans, corn and squash are planted together.

“For so long Europeans came to our shores and they tried to claim everything that was ours as their own,” said Doxtater.

Cornhusk dolls by artist Elizabeth Doxtater. (Erica Daniels/CBC)

“So what I am trying to do is the same thing but the opposite. I call it reverse colonialism because I am claiming things for our people,” she said.

The legend of the cornhusk doll tells the story of a doll that came to life and visited children of different villages to help entertain them while their parents worked. During those visits, people would always tell her how beautiful she was.

One day the doll saw her reflection in the water and eventually spent more time looking at herself than doing the work she was created to do. So her face was removed.

“It was a reminder to the Haudenosaunee people that true beauty comes from your commitments and fulfilling your commitments to other people and not how you look,” Doxtater explained.  

“As our people are healing and we are starting recover and discover and gain that confidence that our ancestors represented we can start filling in those [missing] pieces.”

Source:: http://www.cbc.ca/radio/unreserved/unreserved-heads-to-six-nations-of-the-grand-river-1.3459885/cornhusk-art-reclaimed-from-craft-to-fine-art-1.3465822?cmp=rss

      

Categories
Politics

Cornhusk art reclaimed from craft to fine art

Cornhusk dolls

more stories from this episode

Tucked in a strip mall on the Six Nations of the Grand River, is a little store called Everything Cornhusk. It is owned by artist Elizabeth Doxtater who uses the traditional art of cornhusk dolls to create political statements.

“I call it reverse colonialism,” Doxtater said.

The Mohawk artist re-created three of Leonardo da Vinci’s paintings in the image of a cornhusk doll — Lady with an ErmineUnidentified Woman in a Red Dress and the Mona Lisa.  

Doxtater painted the three images that she calls the Three Sisters of Leonardo in acrylic and set them in an Iroquoian longhouse. The Three Sisters is a reference to the Iroquois method of agriculture where beans, corn and squash are planted together.

“For so long Europeans came to our shores and they tried to claim everything that was ours as their own,” said Doxtater.

Cornhusk dolls by artist Elizabeth Doxtater. (Erica Daniels/CBC)

“So what I am trying to do is the same thing but the opposite. I call it reverse colonialism because I am claiming things for our people,” she said.

The legend of the cornhusk doll tells the story of a doll that came to life and visited children of different villages to help entertain them while their parents worked. During those visits, people would always tell her how beautiful she was.

One day the doll saw her reflection in the water and eventually spent more time looking at herself than doing the work she was created to do. So her face was removed.

“It was a reminder to the Haudenosaunee people that true beauty comes from your commitments and fulfilling your commitments to other people and not how you look,” Doxtater explained.  

“As our people are healing and we are starting recover and discover and gain that confidence that our ancestors represented we can start filling in those [missing] pieces.”

Source:: http://www.cbc.ca/radio/unreserved/unreserved-heads-to-six-nations-of-the-grand-river-1.3459885/cornhusk-art-reclaimed-from-craft-to-fine-art-1.3465822?cmp=rss

      

Categories
Politics

Cornhusk art reclaimed from craft to fine art

Cornhusk dolls

more stories from this episode

Tucked in a strip mall on the Six Nations of the Grand River, is a little store called Everything Cornhusk. It is owned by artist Elizabeth Doxtater who uses the traditional art of cornhusk dolls to create political statements.

“I call it reverse colonialism,” Doxtater said.

The Mohawk artist re-created three of Leonardo da Vinci’s paintings in the image of a cornhusk doll — Lady with an ErmineUnidentified Woman in a Red Dress and the Mona Lisa.  

Doxtater painted the three images that she calls the Three Sisters of Leonardo in acrylic and set them in an Iroquoian longhouse. The Three Sisters is a reference to the Iroquois method of agriculture where beans, corn and squash are planted together.

“For so long Europeans came to our shores and they tried to claim everything that was ours as their own,” said Doxtater.

Cornhusk dolls by artist Elizabeth Doxtater. (Erica Daniels/CBC)

“So what I am trying to do is the same thing but the opposite. I call it reverse colonialism because I am claiming things for our people,” she said.

The legend of the cornhusk doll tells the story of a doll that came to life and visited children of different villages to help entertain them while their parents worked. During those visits, people would always tell her how beautiful she was.

One day the doll saw her reflection in the water and eventually spent more time looking at herself than doing the work she was created to do. So her face was removed.

“It was a reminder to the Haudenosaunee people that true beauty comes from your commitments and fulfilling your commitments to other people and not how you look,” Doxtater explained.  

“As our people are healing and we are starting recover and discover and gain that confidence that our ancestors represented we can start filling in those [missing] pieces.”

Source:: http://www.cbc.ca/radio/unreserved/unreserved-heads-to-six-nations-of-the-grand-river-1.3459885/cornhusk-art-reclaimed-from-craft-to-fine-art-1.3465822?cmp=rss

      

Categories
Politics

Cornhusk art reclaimed from craft to fine art

Cornhusk dolls

more stories from this episode

Tucked in a strip mall on the Six Nations of the Grand River, is a little store called Everything Cornhusk. It is owned by artist Elizabeth Doxtater who uses the traditional art of cornhusk dolls to create political statements.

“I call it reverse colonialism,” Doxtater said.

The Mohawk artist re-created three of Leonardo da Vinci’s paintings in the image of a cornhusk doll — Lady with an ErmineUnidentified Woman in a Red Dress and the Mona Lisa.  

Doxtater painted the three images that she calls the Three Sisters of Leonardo in acrylic and set them in an Iroquoian longhouse. The Three Sisters is a reference to the Iroquois method of agriculture where beans, corn and squash are planted together.

“For so long Europeans came to our shores and they tried to claim everything that was ours as their own,” said Doxtater.

Cornhusk dolls by artist Elizabeth Doxtater. (Erica Daniels/CBC)

“So what I am trying to do is the same thing but the opposite. I call it reverse colonialism because I am claiming things for our people,” she said.

The legend of the cornhusk doll tells the story of a doll that came to life and visited children of different villages to help entertain them while their parents worked. During those visits, people would always tell her how beautiful she was.

One day the doll saw her reflection in the water and eventually spent more time looking at herself than doing the work she was created to do. So her face was removed.

“It was a reminder to the Haudenosaunee people that true beauty comes from your commitments and fulfilling your commitments to other people and not how you look,” Doxtater explained.  

“As our people are healing and we are starting recover and discover and gain that confidence that our ancestors represented we can start filling in those [missing] pieces.”

Source:: http://www.cbc.ca/radio/unreserved/unreserved-heads-to-six-nations-of-the-grand-river-1.3459885/cornhusk-art-reclaimed-from-craft-to-fine-art-1.3465822?cmp=rss