Black History Month kicks off on Thursday, Feb. 1, 2025, and events throughout metro Detroit are honoring the history, culture and legacy of African Americans.
A federal jury in New Mexico has convicted Robert Haack on multiple counts of fraud and violations of the Indian Arts and ...
Reflecting on a Tumultuous Century highlights three Asian artists and marks first exhibit organized by UTA to travel out of ...
Zhegagoynak, the place now known as Chicagoland, has long been a vital center for Indigenous art. This winter, The Block ...
Art certainly imitated life for the Fire Kinship: Southern California Native Ecology and Art exhibit at The Fowler Museum at ...
On Jan. 17, “Cara Romero: Panûpünüwügai (Living Light)” opened at the Hood Museum of Art. Curated by curatorial affairs ...
NextStop Theatre Company will stage “Native Gardens,” a fan-favorite comedy by celebrated local Mexican-American playwright Karen Zacarías, from Jan. 30 to Feb. 16.
The goaltender defied the NHL when he took to the ice wearing the mask during Native American Heritage Night in St. Paul on ...
Friends and creative collaborators remember famed Native visual artist and curator Quick-to-See Smith, who died at 85 on Jan.
Friends and creative collaborators remember famed Native visual artist and curator Quick-to-See Smith, who died at 85 on Jan.
The Amon Carter added a mature content warning soon after opening “Cowboy,” a show originally aimed at “disrupting” the portrayal of the Western ideal as cisgender, straight, and white.
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith – a groundbreaking artist, activist, curator and educator – died Jan. 24 of pancreatic cancer, her New York City gallerist, Garth Greenan, has announced. She was 85.