5pm Gates Open7pm Pre-Show Lecture by Peter Grendle7:30pm Movie starts! We look forward to hearing from you!
The views and opinions expressed by sponsors of and participants in our programs, including our Roads Scholars programs, are their own and do not necessarily represent those of the North Carolina Humanities Council.
Ryan is the archivist at the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) and teaches, currently serves on the New Mexico Historical Records Advisory Board, the New Mexico Association of Museums. 1. The festival and conference will be held in October 2020. Review Santa Fe Photographer Presentations, Drury Plaza Hotel in Santa Fe, Paseo De Peralta, Santa Fe, NM, USA. © The North Carolina Humanities Council is a statewide nonprofit and affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
An initial speaker list will be released in late August 2020.
Two local scholars will build video content and family activity packets. Art, Activism and Archives at IAIA Ep 1: Patron-Driven Digitization, Art, Activism and Archives at IAIA Ep 2: A Second Life for Seeing Red Radio, Art, Activism and Archives at IAIA Ep 3: Empowering Native Narratives, Art, Activism and Archives at IAIA Ep 4: Individual Native Expression, Albuquerque Journal: Red Power Archives at IAIA ». New Mexicans are invited to engage directly with the photographic artists and storytellers to learn more about today's social, environmental, and humanitarian issues.
She has been writing professionally about contemporary art since 2013. “Our work with the NM Humanities Council has provided us with a new path to finding the best way to serve our communities, while continuing to explore our history and culture.”.
Subscribe. She challenges audiences of all ages to think about why things happen the way they do and how they feel about it. The “Community Voices” videos will explore local traditions, stories, and food and will be accompanied by activities to complete at home that encourage deeper connection with local history.
The Santa Fe Council on International Relations (CIR) will host its third Journalism under Fire conference from November 10 to December 3, 2020.
Hard copies & PDFs; E-Books; Research; Artistic Fields. This program is made possible with the support of the New Mexico Humanities Council. The American musical is one of the most unreliable genres in the annals of filmmaking. She has received grants from the Guggenheim Foundation, Lannan Foundation, and Creative Capital, various awards, and nine honorary doctorates in fine arts.
You can watch the film here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnSw9bSzFXE&list=PLUZ1CXvp7IyJ4cD_rwLfAa-GFn0PlMXWz&index=3, The zoom link for the discussion will be posted one week prior to event here: http://fiestalatina.org/transcending-borders-filmdiscussion-series/, Online Transcending Borders Film Discussion: 4 short films: This grant funding will directly support expenses such as staff salaries, general operating costs which support humanities programming, and the digitization of collections and resources to make them available online. The fall deadline is October 1, for programs scheduled after November 2020.
1984-1991 Add a photo to this gallery 1991-2009 Add a photo to this gallery 2009-2011 Add a photo to this gallery 2011-present Add a photo to this gallery The 2020 Digest This! The Bernalillo Community Museum was awarded $7,458 by the New Mexico Humanities Council to support their public programs online, posting “Community Voices” videos for families on YouTube.
Indelible Ink: Native Women, Printmaking, Collaboration, Feminist Border Arts Film Festival (FBAFF), http://fiestalatina.org/transcending-borders-filmdiscussion-series/, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nnSw9bSzFXE&list=PLUZ1CXvp7IyJ4cD_rwLfAa-GFn0PlMXWz&index=3, https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLUZ1CXvp7IyJ4cD_rwLfAa-GFn0PlMXWz, Commerce and Culture on the Santa Fe Trail with Irene Blea. “O’Keeffe from Anywhere” will be free and open to the public. Female Mystics, Mythology and Protofeminism, https://www.516arts.org/programs/events/artist-talks-female-mystics-mythology-and-protofeminism.
North Carolina Center for the Book Announces Selection for 2020 Discover Great Places Through Reading, CHARLOTTE, NC (July 20, 2020) This article was amended September 2, 2020. Contents[show] 1965-1984 This article or section lacks a former logo at the moment. While we are proud of the work we have done, the current moment demands reflection on what more we can do. CHARLOTTE, NC (September 18, 2020) – The North Carolina Humanities Council is pleased to announce $110,197 in Large Grant funding to eight community-based public humanities programs happening across North Carolina.
She has a Master of Arts in Humanities from the University of Chicago, where she studied Medieval and Renaissance Art History, and a Bachelor of Arts in Art History and History from UCLA. This program will take place on October 17, concurrent to the 20th Review Santa Fe Photo Festival, hosting professional development programs for photographers, editors, curators, and publishers.
“Seeking to understand who we are, who we were, and who we aspire to be.” This statement is more than a pithy tagline for the New Mexico Humanities Council; we actively seek to provide New Mexicans... “Seeking to understand who we are, who we were, and who we aspire to be.” This statement is more than a pithy tagline for the New Mexico Humanities Council; we actively seek to provide New Mexicans with opportunities to cultivate mutual understanding and respect through its programming and grants. Please join us as a donor, partner, scholar, or engaged citizen in the important and meaningful work of building a better New Mexico. On this month's Augmented Humanity, we’re talking about archives with the IAIA's Ryan Flahive. Flahive is the editor of Celebrating Difference: Fifty Years of Contemporary Native Arts at IAIA, 1962-2012 and The Sound of Drums: A Memoir of Lloyd Kiva New and co-curator for current exhibit Experimental exPRESSion: Printmaking @IAIA 1963-1981 at the IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts in Santa Fe. @email
The Silver City Museum Society was awarded $6,000 to host a series of virtual discussions, “Unpacking Silver City: An online exploration of the history and culture of Southwest New Mexico.” The series will explore seven major themes for understanding the region’s history and culture, helping the museum continue its mission during the COVID-19 crisis. MARISA SAGE is the Director and Head Curator of the new University Art Museum at New Mexico State University. Funds are intended to help organizations remain connected with their communities, as some are the only cultural provider in their area.
400 Years (1619-2019): Knowing our African American Past and Creating our Future. For more information contact Katrina Stacy, Curator of Education and Interpretation, Georgia O'Keeffe Museum at kstacy@gokm.org. Their wanderings have led them from Finland and Iowa respectively - through Europe, Scandinavia, India, and the U.S. On their way they have picked up tales and songs that they perform, together with the stories behind them, in particular exploring the links between Scandinavian, Celtic, North American and other story singing traditions. These grants help promote and advance discussions in their respective topics, allowing for community conversations and civic dialogue to take place at each public program throughout the state. The 2020 CENTER award winners will present... CENTER Santa Fe was awarded $7,500 for their Annual Review Santa Fe Photo Festival and conference.
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North Carolina Humanities Council Awards Over $110,000 to North Carolina Community Projects, Announcing the 2020 Discover Great Places Through Reading Selection, Over $600,000 in COVID-19 relief funding provided to North Carolina cultural organizations by North Carolina Humanities Council, Judges for Statewide Writing Contest Announced, North Carolina Center for the Book Announces Selection for 2020 Route 1 Reads, North Carolina Humanities Council Trustee Alumni, Bob Brunk: Activist, Anthropologist, Auctioneer, Calvin L. Hall on Journalism and the Humanities, Kimberly Rorschach, The Nasher, and NC's Cultural Scene, Kristen Jeffers: Public Affairs and The Black Urbanist, New Harmonies: Celebrating American Roots Music, Gilbert-Chappell Distinguished Poet Series, Watershed Moments: Our Environmental Stories, Journalism and Media Literacy: Fostering Informed Citizens, Harlan Joel Gradin Award for Excellence in the Public Humanities. Conference dialogue will feature: Once again, we will partner with the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), the American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP), and receive funding support from the New Mexico Humanities Council.
In 2020, the event was cancelled due to Covid-19 restrictions, and WNMU decided to put the series on-line as a virtual presentation. Within the span of one year, New Mexico is home to four woman-centered art exhibitions across the state: Feminisms, 516 ARTS, Albuquerque (guest curated by Andrea R. Hanley, curator at the Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian); Indelible Ink: Native Women, Printmaking, Collaboration, UNM Art Museum, Albuquerque (curated by Mary Statzer); Labor: Motherhood in Art in 2020, NMSU Art Museum, Las Cruces (curated by Marisa Sage); and Feminist Art in the Age of Trump, Axle Contemporary, Santa Fe (curated by noted art writer and activist Lucy Lippard).
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