Citation :
« Honey Moccasin imagines a contemporary reserve where someone has stolen every dance outfit, feather, shawl, and piece of decorative beadwork in the entire community. [...] Who would do this, and why? And how would people respond to such a theft? In [Shelley] Niro's world, they are challenged to find new ways to define what it means to be Indian, and they respond with daring and imagination and creativity. »
-- Paul Chaat Smith
Source :
SMITH, Paul Chaat. « Shelley Niro: Honey Moccasin: Home Alone »
,
dans Reservation X: The Power of Place in Aboriginal Contemporary Art, sous la direction de Gerald R. McMaster, Fredericton, N.B., Goose Lane, 1998.
[en anglais] (p. 111)