Learn about Sweet Land Opera
In this opera, narratives of violence and erasure replace the popular tales of early colonization.
In this opera, narratives of violence and erasure replace the popular tales of early colonization.
More than 100 people contributed blankets and personal stories to Blanket Story.
Jane discusses how art exhibitions build community and how fashion uplifts people.
Check out our Q&A with Aric and read one of his poems.
Rebecca is so dedicated to keeping people safe that she has made over 1,000 masks!
See 22 photos in this online showcase.
Justin works behind the scenes at the museum and in full view out in the community.
Did you make face masks or take up knitting during the pandemic?
The Vida y Arte podcast brings the art of the Americas to the forefront and shows you why it matters now.
Families can explore the exhibition with a pop-up guide and through our online Museum Web Quest.
Contribute to a monumental artwork by artists Cannupa Hanska Luger and Marie Watt. Embroider a message onto a bandana, which the artists will incorporate into a large-scale sculpture for the Each/Other exhibition, which opens at the DAM in 2021.
Excerpts of poems graced the walls of Natural Forces as a way to layer in other voices of the time period to give a richer context of the American experience. For Americans living in the 19th century especially, poetry was a pervasive part of their lives and served as an important way to engage in political and cultural discourses.