Jul 19 Saturday
100 Years of Collecting|100 Years of Connecting is on view through December 13, 2025 at the Nuevo Mexicano Heritage Arts Museum, located at 750 Camino Lejo on Museum Hill in Santa Fe. Admission is free. Hours are noon to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Friday and 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. For more information, visit nmheritagearts.org.
The exhibition marks the Spanish Colonial Arts Society's centennial by telling its century-long story of creating and caring for an extraordinary trove of nearly 4,000 objects representing the distinctive Hispano heritage of New Mexico. This provides a unique lens on the Society’s legacy of connecting to a community of artists and supporters of Hispano arts in New Mexico and beyond.
Join us for a fun, family-friendly day at Explora in support of Susan’s Legacy, a local nonprofit that provides intensive mental health and addiction support for women in our community. Fundraiser attendees receive discounted tickets, and we invite families to explore the museum, learn more about our services, and participate in a silent auction featuring items from generous local businesses.
Can’t attend in person? No problem! Online bidding opens July 16: www.susanslegacy.org
In a partnership with the Martha Liebert Public Library in Bernalillo, Coronado Historic Site offers a “Ranger Read and Learn” story time that is free and geared toward children ages 3 – 7 years old. Today children will learn about constellations, which are a group of stars that look like they are forming a shape or a picture in the sky. Different people all around the world create different constellations. Listen to the story Coyote and the Sky by Emmett Shkeme Garcia then participate in a constellation memory game. The ranger will also lead a watercolor constellation painting activity. Martha Liebert Public Library is located at 124 Calle Malinche, Bernalillo NM, 87004. The event is free. Families of all ages are welcome!
Join us in discovering the beauty and tradition of New Mexico’s famous micaceous pottery. This hands-on class provides the knowledge, history, tools, and clay needed to create your own unique piece in a traditional style—one that reflects your heritage and can be passed down for generations. Embrace this timeless craft, shaping the earth with your hands and connecting with the traditions of the past while creating something meaningful for the future. Class includes gathering materials, preparing the clay, hand-building the pot, shaping and smoothing, drying, pre-firing, and sealing. Registration is $50 per person. Register online at https://app.aplos.com/aws/give/NorthernRioGrandeNationalHeritageArea/Micaceous1
Join us for a free Self Defense Seminar for Women (14+) - no cost, just community, confidence, and courage. 💪Bring a toiletries donation to benefit Locker #505, if you're able.
Harwood Art Center is pleased to present SURFACE: Emerging Artists of New Mexico and Oops, Blurt by Inga Hendrickson. SURFACE is an annual juried exhibition, endowed awards and professional development program presented by Harwood Art Center, to support the creative and professional growth of emerging artists and to expand their visibility and viability in our community. curated through an open call application; as of this year, the program has served 156 exceptionally talented, committed artists, including the 15 we accepted for 2025.
This year’s SURFACE exhibition in Harwood’s Hall Gallery features Benjamin Tobias, Chris Kemler, Christine Sullivan, Desara Boehm, dylan lilla, Geo Evans, Jared Putnam, Latasha Hagan, Linden Eller, Marie-Pier Frigon, Maya Perez, Ocelotl Mora, Olivia Berkey, Roxanne Márquez and Yu Yan.
Gallery Hours are Thursdays - Saturdays from 10am-3pm.
We invite you to join us for an exhibition reception, awards presentation and artist talk by Inga Hendrickson at Harwood Art Center, Saturday, June 21. The reception is 4:30pm - 6:30pm with awards and artist talks starting at 5:00pm. This event is free and open to all ages.
Inga Hendrickson received the SURFACE Harwood Art Center Solo Exhibition Award in 2024, presented annually for artistic excellence, originality of vision and dedication to practice. This year, her awarded solo exhibition Oops, Blurt will run concurrently with SURFACE: Emerging Artists of New Mexico in Harwood’s Front Gallery.
We invite you to join us for an exhibition reception, awards presentation and artist alk by Inga Hendrickson at Harwood Art Center, Saturday, June 21. The reception is 4:30pm - 6:30pm with awards and artist talks starting at 5:00pm. This event is free and open to all ages.
The works in this exhibition span critical moments in Ross’ career and have never previously been exhibited.
Charles Ross: Mansions of the Zodiac is an exhibition of Ross’ artwork inspired by sunlight, starlight, time, and planetary motion. Charles Ross emerged in the 1960s with the advent of minimalism and earthworks, and is considered one of the preeminent figures of land art. This exhibition opens as Ross nears the completion of his earth/sky work, Star Axis, a monumental architectonic sculpture, and naked eye observatory located on the eastern plains of New Mexico.
Image Credit: Charles Ross, Point Source / Star Apace: Weave of Ages, 1975/86, mixed media on paper mounted on canvas, created with 428 photographs from the Falkau Star Atlas which covers the entire celestial sphere from pole to pole, the viewpoint is that of the observer at the center of the earth, 106 x 225 inches. Courtesy of the artist.
$10 Admission, $8 Students and Seniors
The Same Place at the Same Time is a series of three exhibition rotations that trace how art lives within, emerges from, and connects Taos’s creative communities. By gathering a varied array of arts—wood-fired ceramics, volunteer radio, and Pueblo foodways—into the rotating gallery space, the exhibition highlights the many interconnected maker groups within our larger Taos community. The inclusion of visual art, music, and food emphasizes the diversity of creativity that constructs thriving cultures and communities.
The exhibition is process-focused and collectively developed, documenting how these groups operate and co-curated by the groups themselves. It explores the wide-ranging organizational structures of these collectives, in turn allowing us to consider how these frameworks influence art making, relationships, and the rich culture of Taos. It asks how we might further nurture this expansive web of connections, both inside and outside of the gallery space.
Harwood Museum of Art is honored to collaborate with local artists, makers, and cultural leaders who shape and define Taos’s remarkable artistic landscape.
Curated by Kate Miller, Curatorial Assistant, Harwood Museum of Art.
Image Credits: Happy Kiln. Courtesy of Logan Wannamaker
Saturday, June 21, 2025 - Sunday, September 7, 2025Wednesday - Sunday, 11am - 5pm
This program focuses on activities related to different ways people in the ancient past viewed the sky in the daytime and at night. There will be presentations on ancient astronomy, as well as on modern-day astronomy to explain how people of the past interpreted the sky and how modern-day astronomy can tell what is out there. Pending the weather, the presentation will be followed by safe sun observation through two types of solar telescopes. This program is included with admission of $7 for adults and free to children 16 years and younger, NM residents 60 years and older with ID, people with Native/Tribal affiliations, disabled veterans, and foster families.