Friends and creative collaborators remember famed Native visual artist and curator Quick-to-See Smith, who died at 85 on Jan.
On Tuesday, Indigenous artist Jaune Quick-to-See Smith—whose raw works depicting contemporary Native life have appeared at the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Denver Art Museum, and other major ...
Here, Now & Always,” opening February 1, 2025, at the Zimmerli Art Museum exhibits more than 100 pieces from jewelry to ...
She reclaimed lost histories, investigated centuries-old symbols, and acidly critiqued complacency toward the plight of ...
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, the pioneering artist who mapped the Native American experience in dynamic and complex artworks, ...
A champion of contemporary Indigenous artists, prolific creator across a range of media and relentless critic of dominant US ...
The goaltender defied the NHL when he took to the ice wearing the mask during Native American Heritage Night in St. Paul on ...
Providing financial resources and tailored opportunities, the foundation fosters growth and visibility for rising Native talent.
Art certainly imitated life for the Fire Kinship: Southern California Native Ecology and Art exhibit at The Fowler Museum at ...
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, a prolific visual artist and curator based in Corrales and the first artist to curate an exhibition at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., died Jan. 24 after a ...
Piedmont Arts unveiled its new exhibits for January featuring work by contemporary Native American artists, local glass work ...
Dana Tiger, a Native American artist based in Muskogee, is the subject of the short documentary "Tiger," from Tulsa-based ...