Divided into four major categories, each bimonthly issue has its own easy-to-find color-coded section. Quickly turn to the section that interests you the most. Each section lists dates and addresses for upcoming events and activities so you don't miss any important shows or sales.
Historic to Contemporary
Native American Art Magazine
Provoking Discussions
Oct/Nov
Down the Runway • The two-day Kananesgi Fashion Show and Art Market returns with more than 50 artists in Cherokee, North Carolina.
ON THE Market • Historic material now available from galleries and dealers from coast to coast. All of the items featured here are available now.
TEXTILES WEAVINGS
BACK in TIME • Martin Scorsese’s Killers of the Flower Moon enlists artists and authentic objects to take viewers back to the Osage Nation in the 1920s.
On the FRINGES • Diné artist Patrick Dean Hubbell deconstructs art history with inventive works celebrating materiality and personal symbolism.
Objects of HEALING • Weavings and other artwork are on prominent display at the Huntsman Cancer Institute in Utah.
A WOVEN HISTORY • Taos Art Museum presents an exhibition of illuminating 19th -century Navajo child’s blankets.
WEAVING BETWEEN THE LINES • An exhibition explores the correlations between Diné textiles and photography, and the insights they provide into the Navajo homeland and the American Southwest.
On the LOOM
MUSEUMS 2023/2024
STORY TELLING • Museums around the country are presenting exhibitions that allow Native Americans to tell their own stories.
ROAD (MAP) WARRIOR • Jaune Quick-to-See Smith brings her fascinating Memory Map exhibition from New York to Texas.
FUTURE SPACE • In an exhibition at the Nevada Museum of Art, Cannupa Hanska Luger puts a futuristic spin on “cargo cults.”
THE OTHER SIDE • Maine’s Colby College Museum of Art brings in Native American voices to add context to non-Native artwork.
COMPARE & CONTRAST • A New york exhibition featuring Kay WalkingStick examines her work through the lens of the Hudson River School.
MEANINGFUL REPRESENTATION • The National Gallery of Art exhibits an unprecedented survey of contemporary Native art.
COAST TO COAST • A sweeping exhibition of Canadian Indigenous art makes its international debut at the Heard Museum.
INTERFERENCE PATTERNS • SITE Santa Fe hosts a powerful solo exhibition of Nicholas Galanin’s highly conceptional, contemporary works.
IMPLODE/EXPLODE • The Bates College Museum of Art will feature 13 artists in a genre-bending exhibition in Maine.
EITELJORG MUSEUM OF AMERICAN INDIANS AND WESTERN ART • White River State Park • 500 W. Washington Street • Indianapolis, IN 46204 (317) 636-9378 • communications@eiteljorg.com • www.eiteljorg.org
HEARD MUSEUM • 2301 N. Central Avenue • Phoenix, AZ 85004 • (602) 252-8840 contact@heard.org • www.heard.org
MUSEUM OF INDIAN ARTS & CULTURE • 710 Camino Lejo • Santa Fe, NM 87505 • (505) 476-1269 miac.info@state.nm.us • www.miaclab.org
NEW-YORK HISTORICAL SOCIETY • 170 Central Park West • New York, NY 10024 • (212) 873-3400 • www.nyhistory.org
WESTERN SPIRIT: SCOTTSDALE’S MUSEUM OF THE WEST • 3830 N. Marshall Way • Scottsdale, AZ 85251 • (480) 686-9539 www.scottsdalemuseumwest.org
WHEELWRIGHT MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN • 704 Camino Lejo • Santa Fe, NM 87505 • (505) 982-4636 (800) 607-4636 • info@wheelwright.org • www.wheelwright.org
MARYHILL MUSEUM OF ART • 35 Maryhill Museum Drive • Goldendale, WA 98620 (509) 773-3733 • www.maryhillmuseum.org
OKLAHOMA CITY MUSEUM OF ART • 415 Couch Drive • Oklahoma City, OK 73102 • (405) 236-3100 info@okcmoa.com •...