News

A new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum reveals how deeply embedded a Native woman’s perspective on our culture might be. When Jaune Quick-To-See Smith lit up the Whitney Museum’s ...
Though she faced an uphill battle at every turn, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith had the motivation and drive to work tirelessly to ...
No one knows how many Native American women and girls are missing ... Artur Widak/NurPhoto via Getty//Getty Images Hundreds of women participated in the annual Red Dress Day march in downtown ...
It wasn’t until 2020 that the National Gallery of Art made its first acquisition of a painting by a Native American artist ... with black-and-white cutout images of wild animals, birds ...
Curtis spent 30 years documenting over 80 Native American tribes in the early 1900s. He published his photos in a 20-volume ... from elders to babies. A Hupa woman posed for Curtis with her ...
South Puget Sound Community College’s 16th annual Native American Art Exhibition juxtaposes art ... In Ray Larkin’s photos, part of a series called “We Are Still Here,” white-sheeted ...
Native American campaigners are raising questions about the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s first-ever curator of Native American art — claiming she does not belong to a federally recognized ...
Jaune Quick-to-See Smith (1940-2025) has been a driving force in contemporary Native American art since the mid-1970s. Her latest project opens eight days following her death.
This fall marked the release of the last of the 2024 quarters, featuring Native American composer, writer, and activist Zitkala-Ša. This year also honored Civil War surgeon and women’s rights ...