Apr 24 Wednesday
Common Ground - Works on Paper: Paper is the connecting element in this fun and highly creative exhibit. New Mexico artists are invited to show prints, collage, watercolor, pastel and mixed media, all utilizing this wonderful surface for art making -- paper! The exhibit opens Thursday, April 18, and runs through Saturday, May 18, 2024. The artist reception is planned for Saturday, April 27 from 4 PM to 6 PM. Founded in 1929, the New Mexico Art League is an art school and gallery, and a non-profit 501(C)3 association. We are open to the public from 10 AM to 4 PM Tuesday through Saturday, at 3409 Juan Tabo NE, behind the Juan Tabo Library in Albuquerque. Exhibits are also online 24/7. No tickets are required. For information, call 505-293-5034 or visit our website at www.newmexicoartleague.org.
Apr 25 Thursday
Women getting pregnant is a huge deal, with the possibility of many complications as well. Unfortunately, sometimes complications in pregnancy can lead to getting an abortion as well. We believe abortion should be easily available for all women, and that’s why we bring you the ultimate abortion method, Abortion Pills.
A Abortion Pills is the easiest and simplest abortion method. This kit has two primary medicines, mifepristone, and misoprostol, which are considered to be the most effective and safe medical abortion, and many studies prove this fact.
Among so many expensive and lengthy abortion treatments, the Abortion Pills is the one most women will be comfortable with. Many doctors and women’s health specialists also suggest this abortion kit to women with a pregnancy of 10 weeks.
There is much more information related to this abortion kit that every patient must be aware of. We have shared all that important data in this article. Make sure to read till the end so you don’t miss any important points regarding the Abortion Pills.
The conference aims to provide a platform for attendees to exchange ideas, collaborate, and find solutions to pressing challenges in the areas of mechanical engineering, architecture, computation, automation, aerospace engineering, and environmental resilience. Topics of discussion will include innovations in mechanical efficiency, design and fabrication, sustainable construction practices, environmentally conscious solutions, advancements in automation and computation, and much more. The conference will be an opportunity for attendees to network with leading professionals, attend informative workshops and sessions, and gain a deeper understanding of the latest advances in these exciting fields.
Daily Artists in the Courtyard
Dances Monday – Friday at 11am, 12pm, 2pm & 3pm
American Indian Week and the Spring Arts Market are two of the most anticipated events here at IPCC. There is something for everyone – during American Indian Week, you can see cultural dances several times daily, take a self-guided tour of our permanent and temporary exhibitions, dine at the Indian Pueblo Kitchen and shop with us at the Indian Pueblo Store. Plus, there are dozens of Native artists you can meet and buy from directly!
The first weekend of American Indian week is a must for Native art lovers. More than 40 artists will be on site selling pottery, jewelry, paintings, and other beautiful works of art. Enjoy cultural dance groups hourly.
See the schedule of dances on website.
Free for museum members, or with admission.
Da Vinci Machines, The Exhibition will open at the National Museum of Nuclear Science & History on Saturday, January 27. The exhibit features thought-provoking and interactive displays celebrating the creativity and incredible feats of engineering of the acclaimed thinker of the Renaissance, Leonardo Da Vinci. The exhibit is included with the price of admission to the museum.
This interactive exhibition celebrates the central role that Pueblo Baseball has played and continues to play in many community members’ lives at the 19 Pueblos. It tells stories of Pueblo Baseball in looking at the past, present, and future through interviews, photographs, videos, and memorabilia. Critical skills in athletics, judgment, adaptation, and perception as pitchers, batters, runners, catchers, and umpires are passed down through the generations. Pueblo Baseball games carry on a legacy more than 100+ years old with male team members from 15-55 years old playing together at once.
In creating a space for Pueblo communities to be in dialogue with each other about this century-old tradition, the exhibition serves as an introduction to the ways that Pueblo Baseball shapes Pueblo identities and reflects Pueblo value systems to all audiences. A Community Scrapbook Board will facilitate a space where Pueblo community members can contribute their stories and photographs. During the run of the exhibition, the IPCC will be offering a Baseball Card making activity to school groups. The IPCC team will also be coordinating a panel discussion program with Pueblo Baseball players.
This year the symposium will take a deep dive into the questions of America’s international influence as the global order rests on increasingly shaky pillars. Can the U.S. still retain its democratic form of government and compete in this increasingly complex and troubled world? If so, how? This two-day symposium will explore these crucial questions with experts on Europe, Asia, the Middle East, nuclear deterrence, diplomacy, and the importance of information dissemination in the internet age.
"A Tenuous Thread" is a retrospective encompassing five decades of creative output by master weaver Bhakti Ziek. Arranged chronologically, the retrospective charts the evolution of Ziek's pioneering approach to weaving alongside a historical survey of textile craft that raises questions about cultural appropriation that can be traced back to the late Byzantine plot to steal silk production from China's Tang Dynasty.
The retrospective features works from Ziek's storied weaving career, from her humble beginnings as a student of textiles in South America to her prominent career in academia and beyond. Samplers, tapestries, and mounted textile works imbued with personal symbols, motifs, and text from Ziek's life illustrate the inextricable link between the artist's weaving practice and lived experience. Ziek demonstrates this link with live, in-gallery weaving demonstrations on her floor loom every Thursday and Saturday following the exhibition’s opening on 23 February 2023.
A selection of works by Ziek's pupils-turned-colleagues, including Tali Weinberg, Jovencio de la Paz, Anastatia Spicer, Susie Taylor & Ann Morton, accompany Ziek's oeuvre and establish a figurative and material dialogue that evokes the mindful knowledge sharing essential to textile craft and innovation.
Raven Chacon: Three Songs brings together three of Raven Chacon’s projects that pay tribute to Indigenous women through sound, video, and visual work.
This refocusing on female leadership asserts Indigenous women as both keepers of memory and creators of culture. When presented in unison, these works resound the suppressed histories and present-day stories of Native resistance in the face of systemic power.