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DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20170815T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20170815T170000
DTSTAMP:20260501T115619
CREATED:20170726T193616Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170726T230451Z
UID:3622-1502809200-1502816400@poehcenter.org
SUMMARY:Douglas Miles Exhibit Preview & Artist Panel
DESCRIPTION:Exhibit preview of Douglas Miles’ exhibition “Residency” at the Poeh Cultural Center. \n2:00pm – Doors Open\n3:00pm – Artist Panel w/ Douglas Miles\, Cannupa Hanska & Joseph Sanchez \nIn “Residency” Douglas Miles will show all new work created during his recent stay in San Francisco\, California. The deYoung Museum Global Fellow residency allowed him time and space to create new large scale multi-media works. His constant work in the city resulted in creating four new murals\, curate a group art show\, three short films and designed four new Apache Skateboards. His new work was inspired by the streets of San Francisco as well as informed by the creative historical communities such as the Mission District and the Tenderloin. \n\nAbout the Artist \nArtist and founder of Apache Skateboards Douglas Miles is San Carlos Apache\, Akimel O’Odham\, and White Mountain Apache from the San Carlos Apache reservation. \nAs an indigenous visionary\, Douglas Miles is one of those rare and important figures who continues to reside one step ahead of the main stream Native American art world. Miles tells his experiences through an array of mediums including graphic design\, photography\, spray paint\, stencil\, fashion\, found objects\, community organization and whatever else he can use to speak truth about his experience. \nThe imagery of Douglas Miles invites the viewer into an iconic conversation of progression regarding indigenous existence. Miles creates a new set of rules and then breaks them down\, never compromising for the status quo\, and always inviting a necessary representation to the current understanding of what it means to be Native American. His career is a poem written to all who have come before him and to all who will come after. \n\nPanelists \nBorn in North Dakota on the Standing Rock Reservation\, artist Cannupa Hanska Luger comes from Mandan\, Hidatsa\, Arikara\, Lakota\, Austrian\, and Norwegian descent. Luger’s unique\, ceramic­-centric\, but ultimately multidisciplinary work tells provocative stories of complex Indigenous identities coming up against 21st Century imperatives\, mediation\, and destructivity. Luger creates socially conscious work that hybridizes his identity as an American Indian in tandem with global issues. Using his art as a catalyst\, he invites the public to challenge expectations and misinterpretations imposed upon Indigenous peoples by historical and contemporary colonial social structures. \nCannupa Hanska Luger is the recipient of the Native Arts & Cultures Foundation National Artist Fellowship Award among other notable acclaims and has participated in artist residencies and lectures throughout the Nation. Luger currently holds a studio practice in New Mexico\, maintaining a clear trajectory of gallery and museum exhibitions worldwide. \nCannupa Hanska Luger’s work has been noted as “a modern look at ideas of colonization\, adaptability and survival as major components to the development of culture” by Western Art Collector Magazine and The Native Arts and Cultures Foundation noted that “Luger could well rise to be one of those artists whose caliber is unmatched and whose work will be studied by students to come\, thus furthering the path for many more contemporary Native artists.” \nCannupa Hanska Luger graduated with honors from The Institute of American Indian Arts in 2011 with a BFA focusing in studio ceramics. He has been exhibited at Radiator Gallery New York NY;  L.A. Art Show Los Angeles CA; La Bienalle di Venezia Verona\, Italy; Art Mur Montreal\, Quebec; Museum of Northern Arizona Flagstaff AZ; Rochester Art Center Rochester MN; Navy Pier Chicago\, IL; University of Alaska Fairbanks\, AK; National Center for Civil and Human Rights Atlanta GA; Blue Rain Gallery Santa Fe\, NM\, among others. Luger is also in the permanent collections of The North America Native Museum Zürich\, Switzerland; The Denver Art Museum Denver\, CO; The Museum of Contemporary Native Arts Santa Fe\, NM; and The Fred Jones Jr. Museum of Art Norman\, OK. \n\nJoseph M. Sánchez is an American artist from Trinidad\, Colorado\, by way of the White Mountain Apache Reservation and Taos Pueblo. A leader in Indigenous and Chicano arts since the 1970s\, Joseph has worked with hundreds of artists creating work\, developing exhibitions\, and advocating for the rights of minority artists\, most importantly with the Professional Native Indian Artists (Native Group of Seven). A spiritual surrealist\, Joseph’s work is sensual and dreamlike\, provocative and thought-inducing. Still producing work\, and exhibiting across the United States and Canada\, Joseph M Sánchez is simultaneously a community elder\, and an instigator at the front lines of the battle for the creation of art and how we define it as a culture. \nBorn in Trinidad\, Colorado to Pueblo\, Spanish\, and German parents\, Joseph Marcus Sánchez was raised in Whiteriver\, Arizona on the White Mountain Apache Reservation. In 1966\, he graduated from Alchesay High School in Whiteriver\, with the intent to join the priesthood. This was not the right fit\, and he returned home to the White Mountains. Sadly\, his mother became ill and died unexpectedly. Soon after\, in 1968 he joined the United States Marine Corps and was stationed at the El Toro UCMC Base in California\, where he trained soldiers drafted for the Vietnam War. \nIn 1970\, He travelled to Canada\, where he met Ann Nadine Krajeck\, a young photographer. They were married and settled in Richer\, Manitoba\, eventually purchasing a 20-acre farm in Giroux\, Manitoba. In February 1975\, Sanchez returned to the United States under President Gerald Ford’s amnesty program. Ann stayed in Canada\, and Joseph traveled back and forth until she joined him in Arizona in 1978. \nIn 1981\, Joseph and Ann had a daughter\, Rosa Nadine Xochimilco\, and they lived in Scottsdale\, Arizona\, where Joseph maintained a studio on Cattletrack Road. During the 1980s\, Sánchez developed a program as an artist in residence at Rosa’s schools\, teaching college level art history and technique to elementary school students. More than half of those students have gone on to become professional artists. \nSánchez travelled for his work\, and in 1990 began traveling to Santa Fe\, New Mexico where he met Margaret Burke. In 1996 he made his Santa Fe residence permanent\, and they had a son\, Jerome Bonafacio Xocotl. Joseph and Margaret were married in 2006.
URL:https://poehcenter.org/event/douglas-miles-preview-artist-panel/
LOCATION:Poeh Cultural Center\, 78 Cities of Gold Rd\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87506\, United States
CATEGORIES:Indian Market 2017,Poeh Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/DOUGLAS.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20170810T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20170810T193000
DTSTAMP:20260501T115619
CREATED:20170726T225856Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170726T230518Z
UID:3666-1502388000-1502393400@poehcenter.org
SUMMARY:Pueblo Revolt Lecture: Joseph R. Aguilar
DESCRIPTION:The Poeh hosts\, “Understanding the Pueblo Revolt & Spanish Reconquest through the Lens of Indigenous Archaeology\,” a talk by Joseph R. Aguilar (San Ildefonso Pueblo – Ph.D. Canidate\, Department of Anthropology\, University of Pennsylvania). \nThe Pueblo Revolt and Spanish Reconquest were critical moments in Pueblo history that defined the state of Pueblo communities into contemporary times. In the aftermath of the Spanish Reconquest\, Pueblo communities settled in the locations that we know today\, and a new era of pueblo history was brought forth. Recently\, archaeologists and pueblo communities have partnered on projects that investigate the nature of Revolt Era sites on pueblo lands and\, have offered new perspectives and interpretations on this critical juncture of history. Advances in archaeological methods and the rise of Indigenous Archaeology have helped lead the growing trend toward an archaeology that incorporates indigenous values and points of view. This presentation will present some of the findings and innovative methods used in Pueblo Revolt Archaeology\, and how this research is leading to new conversations and understandings about the Pueblo Revolt. \n\nAbout the Speaker \nJoseph Aguilar is an enrolled member of San Ildefonso Pueblo\, and is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Pennsylvania. His primary research focuses on the archaeology of the North American Southwest\, with a specific interest in Spanish-Pueblo relations during the late 17th century. His general research interests include Indigenous Archaeology\, landscape archaeology\, and tribal historic preservation. A collaborative research project with San Ildefonso\, his dissertation research examines Tewa resistance to the Spanish Reconquest efforts in the latter part of the Pueblo Revolt Era (1680-1696) as evident in the archaeological\, historical and\, oral records.
URL:https://poehcenter.org/event/pueblo-revolt-lecture-joseph-r-aguilar/
LOCATION:Poeh Cultural Center\, 78 Cities of Gold Rd\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87506\, United States
CATEGORIES:Poeh Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/20280633_1565469956838345_5886585626047729069_o.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20170617T080000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20170617T160000
DTSTAMP:20260501T115619
CREATED:20170419T203046Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170419T205548Z
UID:3034-1497686400-1497715200@poehcenter.org
SUMMARY:Poeh Summer Arts Market
DESCRIPTION: You are invited to the Poeh Summer Arts Market\n\n\n\nSaturday\, June 17\, 2017\n\n\n\n\nYou are invited to the Poeh Cultural Center’s inaugural Summer Arts Market\, Saturday\, June 17\, 2017. Spend the day talking to artists and shopping for original jewelry\, pottery\, textiles and other arts by Native American artists from across the Southwest. Native food vendors will be onsite to satisfy your appetite for regional cuisine. \nHere\, at the Poeh\, old rhythms of life and ways of making beauty continue. People bringing beauty to the world on a pathway of being\, doing and sharing called the Poeh. \n\n\n\n\n\n\n \n\n\nVendors\, please contact Lynda Romero at 505-455-5047 or email he at lromero@pojoaque.org\n\n-Booth Fee is $75 and additional persons is $25\n\n\n-Food booth are $200 \nApplication Deadline & Full Payment: June 2th by 5 pm.\n \n\n  \n\n 
URL:https://poehcenter.org/event/poeh-summer-arts-market/
LOCATION:Poeh Cultural Center\, 78 Cities of Gold Rd\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87506\, United States
CATEGORIES:Poeh Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/WEB-SummerArtsMarket.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20170224T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20170224T200000
DTSTAMP:20260501T115620
CREATED:20170127T004045Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20170208T155805Z
UID:2967-1487955600-1487966400@poehcenter.org
SUMMARY:Water Is Life Push Pin Show
DESCRIPTION:CALL FOR COMMUNITY ART! \n“Water is Life Push Pin Show” \n\n\n\nThis exhibition marks the very first “Push Pin Show\,” for the Poeh Cultural Center in honor of ongoing efforts of fellow water protectors at Standing Rock Sioux tribe encampments in Cannonball\, North Dakota with participating artists of all medians expressing their creativity of their interpretations of water is life through two dimensional art. Organized by the Poeh Cultural Center Staff\, the exhibit will feature works created within the criteria’s of a pushpin hung art in order to establish an appealing montage of art defining “water is life” and to bring awareness of the continuous battle against the Dakota Access Pipeline. The exhibit will also reflect the Pueblo of Pojoaque’s strong support for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s opposition to the DAPL\, the Pueblo is committed to ensuring access to clean water and air\, protecting land\, scared sites and burial grounds according to the Pueblo of Pojoaque Tribal Council Resolution 2016-183 passed in September of 2016. \nA free-to-attend public opening reception will begin Friday\, February 24th from 5pm to 8pm\, and the public is invited to attend a story-telling session from 7pm-8pm. The story-telling will feature fellow Tribal members from the Pueblo of Pojoaque sharing traditional stories of the significances of water. \nFor additional information about the work of the Poeh Cultural Center and/or the Water is Life exhibit show requirements can be found online at www.poehcenter.org or on Facebook. \n\n\n\nBelow is more information for the “Water is Life pushpin Exhibition” \n1. What are the media for this pin up show?\n-All Two-dimensional works are eligible. This includes: paintings\, prints\, drawings\, photography and/or two dimensional handing sculptures.\n-Three-dimensional works are not eligible nor be accepted. \n\n2. What is it about?\n-The exhibit will feature works created within the criteria’s of a pushpin hung art in order to establish an appealing montage of art defining “water is life” and to bring awareness of the continuous battle against the Dakota Access Pipeline. The exhibit will also reflect the Pueblo of Pojoaque’s strong support for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s opposition to the DAPL\, the Pueblo is committed to ensuring access to clean water and air\, protecting land\, sacred sites and burial grounds according to the Pueblo of Pojoaque Tribal Council Resolution 2016-183 passed in September of 2016. \n3. When is it and what is a pin up show?\n-The push pin show begins Friday\, February 24th at 5pm till 8pm. Artists will have the opportunity to come between the hours of 5pm to 8pm to hang their own work during the exhibit opening. \n-A “Push Pin” show is an exhibit open to all artists of all medians to participate in thinking creatively within the criteria’s of a pushpin hung art in order to create an appealing montage of art made by the community. \n4. Is it open to anyone?\n-Yes\, all ages are welcome \n5. When does the pin up end?\n-Date is to be determined however June 10th is the approx. date \n6. How much does it cost?\n-There is no registration form nor entry fee. However all donations will remain welcome. There will be no donation box for Standing rock but individuals are more than welcome to make their donations to Standing Rock on their main website.
URL:https://poehcenter.org/event/water-is-life-push-pin-show/
LOCATION:Poeh Cultural Center\, 78 Cities of Gold Rd\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87506\, United States
CATEGORIES:Poeh Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/FB-banner.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20161022T093000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20161022T160000
DTSTAMP:20260501T115620
CREATED:20161021T023251Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20161021T023251Z
UID:2695-1477128600-1477152000@poehcenter.org
SUMMARY:IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: Potters Gathering
DESCRIPTION:IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: The People’s Pottery \n\n\n\nThe Poeh Cultural Center will hold a special museum exhibit to welcome home historic Tewa Pueblo pottery on October 21st\, followed by a gathering of Pueblo potters on October 22nd. \nThe People’s Pottery Exhibit\, or IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE in the traditional Tewa Pueblo language\, will take place at the Poeh Cultural Center\, 15 miles north of Santa Fe\, New Mexico. \nOrganized by the Poeh Cultural Center staff and Tewa Pueblo community members\, the exhibit will celebrate the homecoming of nine impressive pots from the Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of the American Indian collection in Washington DC. The exhibit forms part of a larger project working to restore Tewa Pueblo cultural history from collections around the country. \nOrganizers are keen to invite the public along to welcome home the historic pottery\, some of which has been gone for over a century. \nA free-to-attend public opening reception will start proceedings on Friday\, October 21\, and the public are invited to RSVP to a Pueblo buffalo dinner from 6-8pm. The night of celebration will include traditional Pueblo dances from the local Tewa Pueblos as well as a limited edition art showcase\, created to benefit the exhibition. \nThe evening dinner will cost $20 per person\, and those interested in attending should call 505.455.5041 or email info@poehcenter.org to RSVP. \nAs part of the exhibit’s launch\, Saturday\, October 22 will see a gathering of traditional Pueblo potters\, with a host of panel and group discussions investigating the state of Pueblo pottery and contemporary issues facing tradition art today. Festivities will take place from 9.30am-4.00pm and while admission is free\, donations are welcomed to further help the hard work of the project. \nMore information about the work of the Poeh Cultural Center and the IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE exhibit\, can be found on the website www.poehcenter.org or on Facebook /poehculturalcenter. \n\n\n\nFriday\, October 21\n2:00pm – 6:00pm – Public Exhibit Opening\nFree Admission. Refreshments Served. \n6:00pm – 8:00pm – Celebration Evening\n$20 Admission. Food & Drink. Silent Auction. Traditional Dances. \nSaturday\, October 22\n9:30am – 4:00pm – Pueblo Potters Gathering\n9:30-Noon: Potters Only\nLunch-4:00pm: Public Welcome\nFree Admission. Refreshments Served. Traditional Dances.
URL:https://poehcenter.org/event/in-towa-vi-saewe-potters-gathering/
LOCATION:Poeh Cultural Center\, 78 Cities of Gold Rd\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87506\, United States
CATEGORIES:Poeh Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/The-Peoples-Pottery-Invitations.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20161021T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20161021T210000
DTSTAMP:20260501T115620
CREATED:20161021T022816Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20161021T022816Z
UID:2693-1477072800-1477083600@poehcenter.org
SUMMARY:IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: Evening Celebration
DESCRIPTION:IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: The People’s Pottery \n\n\n\nThe Poeh Cultural Center will hold a special museum exhibit to welcome home historic Tewa Pueblo pottery on October 21st\, followed by a gathering of Pueblo potters on October 22nd. \nThe People’s Pottery Exhibit\, or IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE in the traditional Tewa Pueblo language\, will take place at the Poeh Cultural Center\, 15 miles north of Santa Fe\, New Mexico. \nOrganized by the Poeh Cultural Center staff and Tewa Pueblo community members\, the exhibit will celebrate the homecoming of nine impressive pots from the Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of the American Indian collection in Washington DC. The exhibit forms part of a larger project working to restore Tewa Pueblo cultural history from collections around the country. \nOrganizers are keen to invite the public along to welcome home the historic pottery\, some of which has been gone for over a century. \nA free-to-attend public opening reception will start proceedings on Friday\, October 21\, and the public are invited to RSVP to a Pueblo buffalo dinner from 6-8pm. The night of celebration will include traditional Pueblo dances from the local Tewa Pueblos as well as a limited edition art showcase\, created to benefit the exhibition. \nThe evening dinner will cost $20 per person\, and those interested in attending should call 505.455.5041 or email info@poehcenter.org to RSVP. \nAs part of the exhibit’s launch\, Saturday\, October 22 will see a gathering of traditional Pueblo potters\, with a host of panel and group discussions investigating the state of Pueblo pottery and contemporary issues facing tradition art today. Festivities will take place from 9.30am-4.00pm and while admission is free\, donations are welcomed to further help the hard work of the project. \nMore information about the work of the Poeh Cultural Center and the IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE exhibit\, can be found on the website www.poehcenter.org or on Facebook /poehculturalcenter. \n\n\n\nFriday\, October 21\n2:00pm – 6:00pm – Public Exhibit Opening\nFree Admission. Refreshments Served. \n6:00pm – 8:00pm – Celebration Evening\n$20 Admission. Food & Drink. Silent Auction. Traditional Dances. \nSaturday\, October 22\n9:30am – 4:00pm – Pueblo Potters Gathering\n9:30-Noon: Potters Only\nLunch-4:00pm: Public Welcome\nFree Admission. Refreshments Served. Traditional Dances.
URL:https://poehcenter.org/event/in-towa-vi-saewe-evening-celebration/
LOCATION:Poeh Cultural Center\, 78 Cities of Gold Rd\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87506\, United States
CATEGORIES:Poeh Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/The-Peoples-Pottery-Invitations.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Denver:20161021T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Denver:20161021T180000
DTSTAMP:20260501T115620
CREATED:20160825T031006Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20161021T022606Z
UID:2494-1477058400-1477072800@poehcenter.org
SUMMARY:IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: Exhibit Opening
DESCRIPTION:IN T‘OWA VI SAE’WE: The People’s Pottery \n\n\n\nThe Poeh Cultural Center will hold a special museum exhibit to welcome home historic Tewa Pueblo pottery on October 21st\, followed by a gathering of Pueblo potters on October 22nd. \nThe People’s Pottery Exhibit\, or IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE in the traditional Tewa Pueblo language\, will take place at the Poeh Cultural Center\, 15 miles north of Santa Fe\, New Mexico. \nOrganized by the Poeh Cultural Center staff and Tewa Pueblo community members\, the exhibit will celebrate the homecoming of nine impressive pots from the Smithsonian Institute’s National Museum of the American Indian collection in Washington DC. The exhibit forms part of a larger project working to restore Tewa Pueblo cultural history from collections around the country. \nOrganizers are keen to invite the public along to welcome home the historic pottery\, some of which has been gone for over a century. \nA free-to-attend public opening reception will start proceedings on Friday\, October 21\, and the public are invited to RSVP to a Pueblo buffalo dinner from 6-8pm. The night of celebration will include traditional Pueblo dances from the local Tewa Pueblos as well as a limited edition art showcase\, created to benefit the exhibition. \nThe evening dinner will cost $20 per person\, and those interested in attending should call 505.455.5041 or email info@poehcenter.org to RSVP. \nAs part of the exhibit’s launch\, Saturday\, October 22 will see a gathering of traditional Pueblo potters\, with a host of panel and group discussions investigating the state of Pueblo pottery and contemporary issues facing tradition art today. Festivities will take place from 9.30am-4.00pm and while admission is free\, donations are welcomed to further help the hard work of the project. \nMore information about the work of the Poeh Cultural Center and the IN T’OWA VI SAE’WE exhibit\, can be found on the website www.poehcenter.org or on Facebook /poehculturalcenter. \n\n\n\nFriday\, October 21\n2:00pm – 6:00pm – Public Exhibit Opening\nFree Admission. Refreshments Served. \n6:00pm – 8:00pm – Celebration Evening\n$20 Admission. Food & Drink. Silent Auction. Traditional Dances. \nSaturday\, October 22\n9:30am – 4:00pm – Pueblo Potters Gathering\n9:30-Noon: Potters Only\nLunch-4:00pm: Public Welcome\nFree Admission. Refreshments Served. Traditional Dances. \n 
URL:https://poehcenter.org/event/smithsonian-tewa-pottery/
LOCATION:Poeh Cultural Center\, 78 Cities of Gold Rd\, Santa Fe\, NM\, 87506\, United States
CATEGORIES:Poeh Event
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://poehcenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Cover-Image.jpg
END:VEVENT
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