Indigenous Activism through Art and Land: An Evening with Woodrow Hunt and Confluence
About this Event
311 SW 26th Street, Corvallis, OR 97331
Join us for food, film, and conversation with Indigenous filmmaker Woodrow Hunt and celebrate the release of Confluence’s journal series Voices of the River Volume IV!
We will be screening two documentaries produced by Woodrow Hunt and Confluence: “Salmon’s Agreement” and “Stories from the Canoe,” accompanied by video clips from interviews with Willamette Valley elders and community members. These stories speak to the power of art and activism to connect us to place and carry our communities into the future.
Copies of Voices of the River will be available for purchase.
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EVENT INFO
Location: kaku-ixt mana ina haws
Time: Tuesday, Feb. 10, 2026 from 4-6 p.m. Program starts at 4:30 p.m.
Free and open to all
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BIOS
Woodrow Hunt is Klamath, Modoc and an enrolled member of the Cherokee Nation. Woodrow was born and raised in Portland, OR. He has been working in the Native community as a filmmaker since 2017. He has been a longtime collaborator with Confluence, working to produce short documentaries and growing their oral history archive of Tribal voices from the Columbia River ecosystem.
Confluence connects you to the history, living cultures, and ecology of the Columbia River system through Indigenous voices. We are a community-supported nonprofit that works through six art landscapes, educational programs, and public gatherings in collaboration with northwest tribes, communities, and the celebrated artist Maya Lin.