The longest-running Native American art show and competition in Oklahoma is seeking artwork for its upcoming spring event.
At the Heard Museum in Phoenix, Indigenous people from across North America tell their personal stories with intricate footwork and hoop formations.
Indian Time was started 41 years ago as an offshoot of legendary Native American news publication AKWESASNE NOTES ...
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, a fearless artist and indefatigable supporter of her peers who brought the full complexity of ...
Native arts and crafts are widely collected today, and there are contemporary practitioners who have developed their own ...
Taylor designed the mask for Fleury, who wore it in honor of his wife, Veronique, who is an Indigenous person of Canada, ...
The mask, featuring a design by Mdewakanton Dakota artist Cole Redhorse Taylor and worn by Minnesota Wild goaltender ...
On Jan. 17, “Cara Romero: Panûpünüwügai (Living Light)” opened at the Hood Museum of Art. Curated by curatorial affairs ...
Friends and creative collaborators remember famed Native visual artist and curator Quick-to-See Smith, who died at 85 on Jan.
Here, Now & Always,” opening February 1, 2025, at the Zimmerli Art Museum exhibits more than 100 pieces from jewelry to ...
On Tuesday, Indigenous artist Jaune Quick-to-See Smith—whose raw works depicting contemporary Native life have appeared at ...
Intermountain was the largest boarding school for Native Americans in the United States, and throughout its operation housed ...