Pojoaque Farmers Market

The Pojoaque Farmers Market takes place every Wednesday from May through October, from 8:00 AM to 3:00 PM. Join us for a vibrant community market featuring local growers, handmade arts and crafts, baked goods, fresh foods, plants, jewelry, wellness products, and more. The market is a great opportunity to support local vendors while enjoying fresh products and connecting with the community throughout the season.

Interested in becoming a vendor? Booth spaces are available for $15 per market day. For vendor information or questions, please contact Alba Martinez at aemartinez@pojoaque.org or call 505-455-3334 ext. 5059.

Pathways Indigenous Arts Festival 2026

Save the date for the 6th Annual Pathways Indigenous Arts Festival, taking place August 14–16, 2026, at Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino. Join us for an unforgettable weekend celebrating Indigenous art, culture, food, music, and community with talented Native artists from across the country. Experience live cultural performances, film screenings, food vendors, and more throughout the weekend. Whether you are coming to shop, connect, learn, or simply experience the energy of the festival, Pathways offers something for everyone. Keep us on your calendar as we continue to announce exciting programming and special events leading up to the festival.

 

More information here: 

Braiding Our Connections Exhibition

Braiding Our Connections

More than an exhibition; this evening is a celebration of the ways we connect through community, culture, storytelling, art, and one another.

Join us for the opening of Braiding Our Connections by Chad YellowJohn at the Poeh Cultural Center and experience a night woven together with creativity and Indigenous expression.

The evening will feature:

  • A special hoop dance performanceThe unveiling of the 2026 Pathways Festival logo & artwork
  • Screening of the Pathways Festival Documentary created by Ashley Browning from the Pueblo of Pojoaque & Charine Gonzales from the Pueblo of San Ildefonso.
  • Music by DJ Ill Audia
  • Food by Shudine’s Fry Bread Stand

Come gather, celebrate, and be part of an evening centered around connection, creativity, and community.

Poeh Cultural Center – Tower Gallery

 

Pathways Winter Market 2025

Explore the work of over 230 talented artists, enjoy live performances, tasty food, and engaging demos—there’s something for everyone to experience and celebrate at this free event, hosted by the Poeh Cultural Center!

Free Admission & Parking

Soundings: An Exhibition in Five Parts

Soundings: An Exhibition in Five Parts will see a grand opening weekend with a special reception held at each exhibiting venue. Beginning on Friday, July 11, from 5-7pm at the Poeh Cultural Center & Museum, exhibiting artist Tania Willard’s installation and graphic score, Surrounded/Surrounding, will be activated in a communal gathering featuring dancer Than Povi Martinez and a string-based sound artist. Albuquerque’s opening reception, Saturday, July 12, from 6-8pm at 516 ARTS.

Kwee Wah Vi Tuu: She Flows With Strength

Kwee Wah Vi Tuu: She Flows with Strength
An Exhibition by Francesca Maestas

Opening Night: May 23, 2025 | 5:00 PM
Poeh Cultural Center | 78 Cities of Gold Rd., Santa Fe, NM

Join us for the opening of Kwee Wah Vi Tuu, a powerful exhibition by Francesca Maestas, an Indigenous ceramicist of Pojoaque Pueblo (Tewa, Navajo, Cherokee). Her work flows with strength—melding ancestral techniques and materials with contemporary vision.

2025 Pueblo Fiber Arts Show

The School for Advanced Research, in partnership with the Poeh Cultural Center and the New Mexico Fiber Arts Guild, are pleased to announce the 14th Annual Pueblo Fiber Arts Show on Saturday, May 10, 2025.

This event is dedicated to reviving, promoting, and celebrating Pueblo fiber arts, providing artists with an opportunity to showcase and sell their work while educating the public about the rich traditions of Pueblo weaving, embroidery, spinning, and more

Join us in celebrating the artistry and tradition of Pueblo fiber arts!

Balancing Worlds: Reflections on Roxanne Swentzell

The Poeh Cultural Center is proud to present Balancing Worlds: Reflections on Roxanne Swentzell’s Life Work, an exhibition celebrating over 40 years of artistry from one of the most influential Indigenous sculptors of our time.

Roxanne Swentzell, a renowned Santa Clara Pueblo artist, has dedicated her career to storytelling through clay, using traditional techniques to express deep emotional, cultural, and social narratives. Her work has been exhibited in prestigious collections, including The White House, the National Museum of the American Indian, and the Tower Gallery.

This exhibition offers a unique glimpse into Roxanne’s artistic evolution—from early small figurines to monumental sculptures, including pieces from the Nah Poeh Meng permanent installation at the Poeh Cultural Center. Her work continues to inspire generations of artists and communities, reflecting her commitment to culture, creativity, and balance.

Join us for this special exhibition and experience the legacy of an artist whose work bridges tradition and contemporary expression.

Pathways Indigenous Arts Festival 2025

Santa Fe’s Fastest-Growing Native Art Market organized by Indigenous people, for Indigenous people and on Indigenous land.

PATHWAYS has become a premier destination for visitors and collectors to discover vibrant and top-quality Indigenous artwork in diverse genres, created by well-respected artists from traditional Pueblo potters to contemporary emerging artists.

The three-day festival is located at Buffalo Thunder Resort & Casino on the Pueblo of Pojoaque, New Mexico. August 15, 16 & 17, 2025.

Solo Exhibition by Rhiannon Skye Tafoya “My Hands Are Tied”

An exhibition featuring the work of Rhiannon Skye Tafoya (Santa Clara Pueblo/Eastern Band of
Cherokee). Tafoya, utilizes an array of contemporary and historic techniques including
printmaking, digital design, and basketry to create her prints, books and paper weavings. Her
artworks contain elements of both of her tribal cultures, and she is particularly inspired by the
stories, lines, colors preserved and maintained within her family’s basketry and artistic
traditions.