Famous Oklahoma Indian artist Woody Crumbo was a typical starving artist -- he had earned a certain amount of fame, but little money.
While collecting artifacts for the Museum of the American Indian in 1923, anthropologist William Wildschut became intrigued by a buffalo rawhide war shield owned by an Apsáalooke Tribe member.
Art Without Reservation,” a second in the series displaying works from a variety of American Indian artists. Art Without Reservation, organized by curators Ellen Napiura Taubman and David Revere ...
The Southwestern Association for Indian Arts is excited to announce that the annual Winter Indian Market will be held at the ...
After spearheading the modern fight for Native American rights, Minneapolis and nearby Saint Paul are experiencing an ...
The Heard Museum’s renovated shop is set to reopen for visitors. Look for it to open for business again at 10 a.m. Monday, ...
SAN ANTONIO - The Briscoe Western Art Museum is showcasing Indigenous art and culture with a special event this November. On ...
Modern travel is not for the faint of heart, and the ongoing construction at Denver International Airport ratchets up the ...
The line to enter the Mitchell Museum of the American Indian stretched out the door Monday as museumgoers celebrated ...
Multidisciplinary artist Suchitra Mattai’s exhibit “Myth From Matter” will run through Jan. 12.
Phoenix marked its second official Indigenous Peoples Day holiday with a festival held Oct. 11-14. The festival gave Arizona ...
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the Indian Citizenship Act, which gave Indigenous people U.S. citizenship. On a ...