Sep 14 Sunday
The Environmental Resilience, Livability, and Public Health conference brings together experts from various disciplines to examine the challenges and opportunities at the intersection of sustainability, urban development, and public health. In light of the escalating environmental challenges, swift urban expansion, and health inequities that the global community is confronting, this event provides a platform for the exploration of innovative solutions and progressive strategies.
Arrowsoul Art Collective’s mural installation fuses concepts of the beginning, present, and future of Indigenous pictographic arts. Based in the Southwest region, Arrowsoul Art Collective creates graffiti walls and mural paintings inspired by the evolving meanings of “Future Old School” and “Indigenous Freeways.” The artists create new visions of the Southwest landscape through blending letter structures, illustrative architecture, and textured palettes of places of home. Arrowsoul Art Collective’s projects reunite communities along the Rio Grande through creative participation. Located in the Art Through Struggle Gallery, their newest mural will be on display through June 28, 2026.
Free for museum members, or with admission.
“Sentient Structures: The Art of Skye Tafoya + SABA,” on view through November 2, 2025, showcases the work of two artists creating architecturally-inspired expressions in materials that respond to the senses. Skye Tafoya (Eastern Band Cherokee/Santa Clara Pueblo) weaves paper structures and embeds knowledge in them through her printmaking processes. SABA (Diné/Jemez Pueblo) makes paintings and prints that anchor Pueblo architecture as evolving sites of home. This exhibition offers innovative approaches to printmaking, painting, and book arts and blurs the lines between two and three-dimensional mediums.
Curated by the Indigenous Design + Planning Institute at The University of New Mexico, “Restorying Our HeartPlaces: Contemporary Pueblo Architecture” showcases a near-present history of the architectural sovereignty that emerged after the 1975 Indian Self-Determination Act. This exhibition focuses on the work of Pueblo architects while representing design concepts from regional ancestral sites that continue to influence 20th and 21st century Pueblo architecture. It will be on view in the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center’s South Gallery from March 25 through December 7, 2025
Free Admission to the Balloon Museum every Sunday morning between 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. (Excludes the first 2 Sundays in October.)
Sustainable Creative Industries contribute to economic growth, cultural preservation, and environmental sustainability. The Sustainable Creative Industries Conference will explore innovative practices like sustainable manufacturing and the circular economy, inspiring collaboration and positive change in creative sectors
Every Sunday May-Oct 10am to 2pm. The Rail Yards Market is focused on building a resilient, sustainable local economy that we all love to work and play in. Through food, art, and music, we hope to bring our community together in an atmosphere of fun, learning, and creativity. Rail Yards Market is a community organization and a certified 501(c)(3)
The Rail Yards Market of Albuquerque operates on Sundays from 10am-2pm during the months of May-October. A non-profit run growers' market, originally established in 2014 by volunteers and neighborhood residents, celebrating all things local and at the heart of New Mexican culture. We are much more than your typical farmer's or grower's market; every Sunday you can peruse 100's of New Mexico's finest food, farm, artisan, and healing vendors, hear live musicians, and come away enriched from our educational and demonstration zones for kids and adults! Every Sunday is a different theme with different activities and vendors you wont want to miss. All located at The Rail Yards in the historic Barelas neighborhood in the heart of our City!
William Inge's uproarious comedy. On a snowy, stormy, night in rural Kansas, Missouri, about 25 miles west of Kansas City, a diner can be an oasis, a prison, a place to hide, or a place to discover yourself. The sheriff has closed the road, forcing the driver and passengers to spend the night at the diner. A mismatched group of dreamers and cowboys, waitresses and outcasts find unexpected warmth in one another. Portraying these characters on stage at The Adobe Theater are Jessica Alden, Mario Cabrera, Scott Claunch, Bryan Hertweck, Nicholas Johnson, Catalina Lehner, Castalia Mayerhofer, and Joel D. Miller, directed by Georgia Athearn.