Front Cover: Cover Artist: Born in Oklahoma, Native American artist Anita Fields creates works of clay and textile that reflect the worldview of her Osage culture. Her work represents the disruption of balance found within the earth and our lives and, more broadly, early Osage notions of duality such as earth and sky, male and female. Fields’s sculptures were exhibited in Changing Hands:Art without Reservation in New York City. Her work was featured in the8th Native American Fine Art Invitational at the Heard Museum inPhoenix, Arizona. Her work was also included in Who Stole the Teepee? at the National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution,New York; and the Legacy of the Generations: Pottery by American IndianWomen, National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC. Fields has been awarded numerous residencies, including the Eitelljorg Museum’s RARE program and the Andy Warhol Fine Arts Residency at the Heard Museum. Fields was one of forty- seven Native American delegates funded by the Kellogg Foundation and the Institute of American Indian Arts to travel to South Africa for Th e Answers Lie Within. Fields is a fellow with theKaiser Tulsa Artist Fellowship program. Fields’s work has been published in Southwest Art magazine, American Craft , Ms. Magazine, American Style, and Native Peoples. Her work can be found in several collections, such as the Museum of Art and Design in New York City; the Institute of AmericanIndian Arts Museum, Santa Fe, New Mexico; the Crystal Bridges Museum, Bentonville, Arkansas; and the Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona.About Movement of the Sun #2Th is representation is symbolic of the spiritual and cultural memory found in the terrain of our original homelands and sacred places. Th e daily path of the sun over the earth is indicative of Osage thought and philosophy, as it gives life to our existence and stands as a metaphor for our journey.