The Right to Remember BY EMILY WITHNALL In 1990, at the height of Peru’s war, Wari Zárate and other artists in the Andes began [...]
Sacrifice Lost . . . and Found BY DEVORAH ROMANEK Only a few years before the United States joined the Great War as it was raging in Europe, [...]
The Center Will Not Hold BY JACQUELINE KEELER We live in a world largely constructed by the wants and dreams of white men. When we [...]
Santa Fe’s First Exhibition BY DAVID ROHR Before there were any museums in Santa Fe, civic boosters presented what was likely the very [...]
Love is a Verb BY LES DALY In the year 1968, America was in turmoil. It was a time of war, assassinations, riots, and [...]
The People’s Art BY CHARLENE CERNY A Gathering of Voices: Folk Art from the Judith Espinar and Tom Dillenberg Collection, [...]
Western Apacheria BY NEPHI CRAIG LAND Landscape is destiny. As Indigenous peoples, we represent our landscapes. Basically, [...]
Against Minimalism BY CANDACE WALSH Minimalism has enjoyed an unquestioned mandate for years. Clean out your closet! Banish [...]
Of Pig-Dogs and Plethoras BY CANDACE WALSH Jack Loeffler’s feature, “The Practice of Aural History” describes his epic, lifelong [...]
Presents Rich with Provenance BY NICOLASA CHÁVEZ The Museum of International Folk Art (MOIFA) regularly displays recently acquired items [...]
Photo Synthesis BY HANNAH ABELBECK One hundred and fifty years ago, thousands of Navajo people undertook a second arduous [...]
Coyota BY JOSÉ ANTONIO ESQUIBEL Pueblo Indians and Hispanos of New Mexico share common bonds forged over the course [...]
Semiotic Sovereignty BY MARLA REDCORN-MILLER The following interview with Mateo Romero (Cochiti) describes a more abstract form of [...]
Dance of the Monarch BY EMILY WITHNALL Thomas Haukaas (Lakota) beads like a painter. At first glance, a viewer might simply see [...]