EventsAll events are free and open to the public. |
Homelands: Contemporary Haudenosaunee Art Across New York Homelands: Contemporary Haudenosaunee Art Across New York unites multigenerational Haudenosaunee artists and knowledge holders who center their historical relationship and reciprocity to the land, air, and waters across New York State. Working through diverse practices including photography, painting, sculpture, basketry, beadwork and documentary, the landscape is not a backdrop, but integral to Haudenosaunee culture and lived experience, which is woven into the work. The exhibition serves as a visual form of Indigenous knowledge sharing. It reclaims space and history through art, inviting visitors to reconnect with the land beneath their feet. Guest curated by Luanne Redeye (Seneca), Assistant Professor, Department of Art Practice,
University of California, Berkeley |
Artists and Curator in Conversation |
Community-made basket facilitated by Black Ash Basketmakers Holly John (Seneca) and Penelope Minner (Seneca), will provide the structure consisting of tooled Black Ash tree wooden splints and invite attendees to participate in the making of a basket, by weaving in either traditional materials brought by the basketmakers or alternatives: materials either found or meaningful that visitors are asked to bring. For more information, click . Support for this event is provided by the ºÚÁÏÊÓƵ Convocations Committee. This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. |
Talk with filmmaker, Caleb G. Abrams Caleb G. Abrams (Onöndowa'ga:', Wolf Clan) will show and discuss his recent short film Haudenosaunee: People of the Longhouse, and his ongoing project The Burning of My Coldspring Home. An excerpt from the latter is on view in the ºÚÁÏÊÓƵ Art Museum current exhibition, Homelands: Contemporary Haudenosaunee Art Across New York. Special thanks to the ºÚÁÏÊÓƵ Cinema Department. This project is supported in part by the National Endowment for the Arts. |
Cookies & Curators Meet our new curator, Joseph T. Leach, and tour student curated exhibitions. |