May 16 Thursday
Common Ground - Works on Paper: Paper is the connecting element in this fun and highly creative exhibit. New Mexico artists are invited to show prints, collage, watercolor, pastel and mixed media, all utilizing this wonderful surface for art making -- paper! The exhibit opens Thursday, April 18, and runs through Saturday, May 18, 2024. The artist reception is planned for Saturday, April 27 from 4 PM to 6 PM. Founded in 1929, the New Mexico Art League is an art school and gallery, and a non-profit 501(C)3 association. We are open to the public from 10 AM to 4 PM Tuesday through Saturday, at 3409 Juan Tabo NE, behind the Juan Tabo Library in Albuquerque. Exhibits are also online 24/7. No tickets are required. For information, call 505-293-5034 or visit our website at www.newmexicoartleague.org.
This interactive exhibition celebrates the central role that Pueblo Baseball has played and continues to play in many community members’ lives at the 19 Pueblos. It tells stories of Pueblo Baseball in looking at the past, present, and future through interviews, photographs, videos, and memorabilia. Critical skills in athletics, judgment, adaptation, and perception as pitchers, batters, runners, catchers, and umpires are passed down through the generations. Pueblo Baseball games carry on a legacy more than 100+ years old with male team members from 15-55 years old playing together at once.
In creating a space for Pueblo communities to be in dialogue with each other about this century-old tradition, the exhibition serves as an introduction to the ways that Pueblo Baseball shapes Pueblo identities and reflects Pueblo value systems to all audiences. A Community Scrapbook Board will facilitate a space where Pueblo community members can contribute their stories and photographs. During the run of the exhibition, the IPCC will be offering a Baseball Card making activity to school groups. The IPCC team will also be coordinating a panel discussion program with Pueblo Baseball players.
Shop for a treasure. Support a Legacy.
Indulge your passion for art and culture while making a meaningful impact. Every winning bid contributes directly to sustaining the Harwood Museum as a cornerstone of art and culture in Taos, NM. It’s not just a transaction; it’s an investment in the future of creativity, education, and community spirit.
Online bidding begins at 9:00 a.m. MDT on Sunday, May 12th and closes at 8:00 p.m. MDT on Saturday, May 18th.
The New Mexico Watercolor Society hosts its 2024 Annual Spring Exhibition May 4-25 at the Expo-NM Fine Arts Gallery in Albuquerque. Soak up a splash of springtime with dozens of water media artists from throughout the state (and beyond). Both standard-sized and small works will be featured. All paintings are available for purchase. Hours are 10am-4pm Thu-Sun (closed Mon-Wed). Opening Reception and Award Ceremony is Saturday, May 4, 1-4pm. Admission is free. An Expo-NM parking fee may apply. More info at nmwatercolorsociety.org.
Raven Chacon: Three Songs brings together three of Raven Chacon’s projects that pay tribute to Indigenous women through sound, video, and visual work.
This refocusing on female leadership asserts Indigenous women as both keepers of memory and creators of culture. When presented in unison, these works resound the suppressed histories and present-day stories of Native resistance in the face of systemic power.
Through original documents, photographs, and artifacts, Witnessing Justice examines the challenges and importance of the Nuremberg trials and the international community’s response to Nazi crimes against humanity. This exhibit gives insight into the experience of prosecuting war crimes from the perspective of members of the legal team.
Now, you can also dive into the stories of Nuremberg through the interactive digital scrapbooks and photo albums of those who took part. NMHIM has engaged Corrales-based digital exhibit developer IDEUM to bring a dynamic new dimension to our exhibit.
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"We’ve Been Gathering Places" is a culmination and celebration of two years of rigorous studies by the Institute of American Indian Arts 2024 Masters in Studio Arts graduating cohort. Comprised of suspended installations, large-scale wall sculptures, paintings, photographs, multichannel new media works, and interactive displays, We've Been Gathering Places turns form & concept's 10,000 square-foot exhibition space into eight discrete articulations of lived experience.
Featured artists: Joely BigEagle-Kequahtooway, Leah Mata, Erin Ggaadimits Ivalu Gingrich, Lozen Haozous, Mekko Harjo, Kéyah Henry, Hapistinna (Graci) Horne, & Daisy Trudell-Mills.
Jerusalem Demsas, staff writer at The Atlantic specializing in housing and the economy, will discuss the reasons housing prices keep rising and the ways cities like Santa Fe can strengthen planning and zoning regulations to increase affordability and build community. As Santa Fe works to update its Land Development Code (which dictates how development can happen), Jerusalem will share national models of success and ways Santa Fe can better prepare for and manage its inevitable growth.
The Harwood’s current exhibition, Raven Chacon: Three Songs, amplifies stories of Indigenous resistance and pays tribute to Indigenous women through sound, video, and visual work. Join us for a dynamic conversation featuring local Indigenous women working at the intersection of activism and the arts. Moderated by Christina Castro, PhD, the panel will share stories from their recent projects and engage in a dialogue about the power of art to disrupt inequitable systems and imagine a future grounded in Indigenous sovereignty.
This event is free. Donations welcome.
Panelists:
Autumn D. Gomez
Emileah Lujan
Midnite Lujan
Christina Castro, PhD