Jul 13 Monday
EARLY CLOSURE AT 3PM ON MARCH 20TH DUE TO PRIVATE EVENT.Organized by the School for Advanced Research (SAR) and the Vilcek Foundation, Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery, a unique traveling exhibition featuring over 100 historic and contemporary works in clay, offers a visionary understanding of Pueblo pots as vessels that carry community-based knowledge and personal experience. The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (IPCC), established by the 19 Pueblos of New Mexico in 1976, welcomes the pottery vessels back to the Southwest as the “returning home” host venue of the exhibition’s four-year national tour. Curated by the Pueblo Pottery Collective, Grounded in Clay opens at the IPCC as the leading program of the Center’s 50th anniversary celebration year. The exhibition and its associated events are generously supported by the First Nations Development Institute and Noon Whistle Fund.
EARLY CLOSURE AT 3PM ON MARCH 20TH DUE TO PRIVATE EVENTIn honor of the 50th anniversary of the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (IPCC), this exhibition highlights the Center’s history through Pueblo imagery and perspectives of the past, present, and future. A combination of fifty objects from the IPCC’s Collections and Archives, with an emphasis on Pueblo pottery, illustrates the significance of the Center as a gathering place where Pueblo arts and culture are celebrated by visitors from around the world and, at once, nurtured by Pueblo communities across the generations. Gallery videos, updated throughout the year, will feature interviews with Pueblo artists, scholars, and culture bearers that present insider views of the IPCC. Join us to celebrate the exhibition on March 21 from 5-8pm during our free, public reception. Visit indianpueblo.org for 50th anniversary program schedule updates including an exhibit closing event on February 15, 2027.
Folks had an amazing time at the first session of our Summer Latinx Writing Community, and now it’s time to shift gears from poetry into genre fiction and beyond in our second workshop at FUSION | The Cell on Monday, July 13, from 3–5 PM. Join us for Trope and Cliché Workshop led by John Hardberger.
Workshop Description
In this workshop, we'll demystify narrative by examining the conventions and tropes that make stories work, the clichés that make readers lose interest, and all the fine lines in between. Through discussion, research, and generative writing exercises, we'll explore how stories are constructed, how reader expectations are both met and subverted, why genres exist, and whether we want to bother with them in the first place.
Workshop Led by John Hardberger
John Hardberger is a Texpat writer, editor, and DJ living in New Mexico. He is an MFA candidate at the University of New Mexico and an alum of the 2025 Clarion Writers Workshop.His fiction straddles the mundane and the weird, exploring the liminal spaces, between identities, cultures and landscapes. His work has appeared in Helicon, Chicago magazine, and Edible New Mexico, and he once held the hotdog beat for the Chicago Tribune.
Jul 14 Tuesday
Albuquerque Abstract Artists Alliance will have a new exhibit, "New Visions of the Natural World," June 20 through Aug. 1 at Open Space Gallery, 6500 Coors Blvd. NW, Albuquerque, NM 87120. Exhibit Hours will be 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Tuesdays through Saturdays.
The NMSU Art Museum is excited to announce the opening of Mapping Spaces: Selections from the Lannan Art Collection at NMSU. This exhibition will showcase selections from the generous gift of 63 works of art from the Lannan Art Collection to the NMSU Permanent Art Collection in 2024. Mapping Spaces will open in the Contemporary Gallery on Thursday, June 11th, and run until September 5th, 2026.
After almost 65 years, with 27 of those spent in Santa Fe, New Mexico, Lannan Foundation closed in 2024. As part of Lannan’s closure, the Foundation gifted its remaining collection of more than 1,600 objects to 55 institutions, including the NMSU Art Museum. By adding these pieces to the UAM’s collection, this gift deepens the significance of the works by placing them into an academic context, where teaching, research, and public engagement further activate each of them. The NMSU Permanent Art Collection continues to evolve and grow not only as a repository of contemporary art objects, but also as a living resource that invites ongoing dialogue about the role of artists in shaping how the NMSU and Las Cruces communities understand our dynamic border region.
Featuring artists such as Claudia Andujar, Subhankar Banerjee, Max Cole, Pard Morrison, Victoria Sambunaris, and James Turrell, Mapping Spaces brings together a dynamic range of artists whose works explore landscapes and the environment, documentary photography, abstraction, and traditional art historical references. Together, this exhibition features artists at the center of the UAM’s mission, emphasizing the importance of continued support for art, research, and community-engaged practices in cultivating a creative ecosystem across New Mexico.
Join us for the opening reception on June 11th from 4:30-6:30 PM. UAM is open Tuesday-Saturday, 10am-4pm, at 1308 E. University Ave., Las Cruces, New Mexico, 88003. Admission to all programming is free and open to the public. For more information and a detailed calendar with associated programs and dates please visit uam.nmsu.edu.
We are celebrating 100 years of Route 66 and 50 years of Pride in Albuquerque with documenting and sharing LGBTQ+ spaces and stories as well as planning for LGBTQ+ historical markers in Albuquerque and statewide.
Join us for Albuquerque LGBTQ+ Spaces & Stories Community Project - Zine Making & Storytelling Workshop on Tuesday, July 14 from 5:30-7:30pm at the International District Library, 7601 Central NE.
Contact christopher@togetherforbrothers.org for more information.
Donate at bit.ly/LGBTQ66ABQ with memo: LGBTQ66ABQ. Thanks for financial and other support from the Albuquerque Community Foundation, Albuquerque Museum, Bernalillo County Commissioner Adriann Barboa, City of Albuquerque Arts and Culture, City of Albuquerque City Councilor Nicole Rogers and Transgender Resource Center.