Tag: #Art

  • OffCenter Arts Harvest Brunch

    OffCenter Arts Harvest Brunch

    Support OffCenter’s community art program and enjoy delicious food catered by Knead, as well as games, puppets, art-making, a DJ, an art-supply raffle – and a chance to connect with your community – at OffCenter’s Harvest Brunch!

    Get your ticket – or fund a ticket for an OffCenter artist – at https://www.offcenterarts.org/celebrate-oc-brunch.

  • ABQ Artwalk

    ABQ Artwalk

    September’s Artwalk will be held on Friday the 6th! This month will feature a series of art exhibits, art markets, and outdoor live painting.

  • Virtual Art Workshop: NMAAHC Design Trinket Dish

    Virtual Art Workshop: NMAAHC Design Trinket Dish

    Create your own trinket dish inspired by the iron lattice work on the National Museum of African American History and Culture.

    Your $20 ticket includes a packet of materials mailed to you – you just provide a home oven, baking sheet, and parchment paper!

    Sign up for the workshop (and pay) HERE BY SEPTEMBER 18. Learn more about the NMAAHC building HERE.

  • OffCenter Arts Community Dinner

    OffCenter Arts Community Dinner

    Join the fun and connect with your community at this FREE potluck! Bring a dish to share or just bring yourself.

    Join in an optional mini journal activity and enjoy a performance led by theater artist extraordinaire Marie. Check out updates to the studio and shop the gallery. It’s going to be an awesome evening!

  • Albuquerque Artwalk

    Albuquerque Artwalk

    Enjoy only-in-New-Mexico creativity at this month’s Artwalk! Art, vendors, and lots more down Central Ave (and Copper too) from 1st to 9th streets. Shop, eat, or just get an eyeful of wonderful work from local artists!

    More info at the Artwalk website.

  • Pride Paint and Puff

    Pride Paint and Puff

    Get your tickets HERE for this 21+, cannabis-friendly event!

    The Mothership Alumni will host a painting session with all supplies included: Choose from a blank canvas a pre-stenciled one. Painting guides will be there to help! Cannabis provided by PurLife; you may bring your own as well. $40 entry.

     

  • True NM Exhibition Combats State’s Tricultural Myth 

    by Kristin Satterlee

    You’ve probably heard New Mexico’s tricultural myth: the common misconception that the state’s culture is a harmonious blend of Indigenous, Latinx, and Anglo heritages. Setting aside this myth’s other inaccuracies, where does that fable leave the stories of African American and AAPINH (Asian American, Pacific Islander, and Native Hawaiian) New Mexicans who are just as much a part of the tale? 

    Twelve young New Mexicans move the needle on that myth in the fourth annual True NM 2024 Sawubona Exhibition, taking place during this May’s Albuquerque Artwalk on May 3. The True New Mexico program, cosponsored by New Mexico Black Leadership Council and New Mexico Asian Family Center, is designed to combat racism by bringing young people together to share their stories with the community through art. The artists receive a stipend for supplies and to pay for their time, allowing them to focus on creating. But before the art gets made, the artists do a deep dive into their own stories and those of their wider communities. 

    “We asked the youth from the start. … What matters to you?” says Sarah “Zee” Azibo, program coordinator. “When you’re talking about anti-racism, what do you want to talk about? It’s been really powerful. [The youth artists] are the ones who made this what it is.” 

    Those discussions ranged wide and deep from February through April, through topics like affirmative action, equity vs. equality, intersectionality, othering, identity, and self-perception. As well as having those weighty conversations—facilitated by youth coordinators Kai Warrior and Ayami Nakanishi—True NM artists met with BIPOC guest artists and participated in activities: A shoe swap helped them learn deeply about the other youth in their cohort, a Downtown art walk led to reflection about representation in public art, and more.  

    The 2024 True NM cohort selected “Sawubona”—a Zulu term that means “I see you seeing me”—as this year’s exhibition theme. The True NM program does more than combat racism and the tricultural myth: It develops leaders by increasing participants’ self-esteem and awareness of themselves, their communities, and the wider world. You can be part of that development—by attending and supporting the True NM Exhibition, and by getting the kids in your life involved in other arts-based leadership development opportunities like NMBLC’s Roots Summer Leadership Academy (RSLA). RSLA helps youth develop self-esteem and leadership through interpersonal connection, STEM, arts, and social-emotional learning. Registration opened in April, so learn more and sign up at bit.ly/rsla2024

    Don’t take our word for the value of these programs in the development of the youth who will lead us into the future. In the words of 2024 True NM artist Isabella Park, “This is the first time I’ve ever had people that look like me and share the same cultural identities as me speak about the passions I share. … I was able to connect and process traumas and my own experiences that I didn’t realize were there.” 

    True NM Sawubona Exhibition Opening Reception 

    May 3, 2024 

    5:30-8:30pm 

    Orpheum Community Hub  

    500 Second Street NW 

  • Mural Club Celebration for El Día del Niño

    Mural Club Celebration for El Día del Niño

    Join the Hayes Middle School Mural Club and Garfield MS to celebrate their new mural on El Día del Niño at the Education Building at the National Hispanic Cultural Center (NHCC)!

    Event illustration is the club’s latest mural, about balance and how we work with the dark, negative, or scary things in our lives.

  • 2024 True NM Exhibition

    2024 True NM Exhibition

    The 2024 True New Mexico youth artist cohort – all Black and AAPINH – will exhibit their work at this free exhibition and discuss with attendees, exploring their own True New Mexican identities and narratives through their art.

     

    A collaboration between NMAFC and NMBLC, working to combat New Mexico’s tricultural myth. More information HERE.

  • Diné Smithing Workshop: Expressing Culture Through Art

    Diné Smithing Workshop: Expressing Culture Through Art

    Make a small stamped copper ring and learn about the history of smithing through Indigenous lenses, especially its meaning to the Diné people.

    Materials provided, registration required! RSVP HERE.

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