News

Native art has a rich history but young artists want to expand its roots and move things in different directions. What is the future of Native art?
“Action/Abstraction Redefined” features 36 artists and over 50 works of art from the Institute of American Indian Arts' permanent collection across the movements of abstract expressionism ...
Mary Sully’s “Indian Church,” among 25 triptych drawings created by the artist from the 1920s to the 1940s, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in a show of graphic virtuosity. Karsten Moran ...
The Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian’s Native Art Market returns to the museums in Washington, D.C., and New York Dec. 2 and 3. This annual event invites lovers of art and ...
The Museum of the Southeast American Indian invites the public to immerse themselves in the vibrant creativity of American ...
The Mokuck, a distinctively shaped birchbark basket seen in many variations throughout Native Indian art, arouses a viewer's curiosity and admiration.
Earlier this month, four top students from the Zuni Youth Enrichment Project’s Emerging Artist Apprenticeship in graphic arts ...
A new exhibit at the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts in Little Rock is an exploration of modern American Indian art inspired by Abstract Expressionism, Color Field, and the Hard-Edge painting movements.
After decades of “staying within the lines” of traditional Native art, Indigenous artists are increasingly moving into the contemporary art space.
“Conscientious Conscripture,” an installation by the New Red Order collective in “Indian Theater: Native Performance, Art, and Self-Determination Since 1969” at the Hessel Museum of Art at ...
TULSA, Okla. — The Tulsa Indian Club hosted their February Native American Art Market at Mother Road Market, near 11th and Lewis, on Saturday. The event had Native American art for sale as well ...