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EXHIBITIONS + EVENTS CAlendar SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 2015


SMITHSONIAN’S NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN IN NEW YORK CITY


NYC EXHIBITIONS


MERYL MCMASTER: SECOND SELF THROUGH DECEMBER 11


CERAMICA DE LOS ANCESTROS: CENTRAL AMERICA’S PAST REVEALED THROUGH JANUARY 2017


GLITTERING WORLD: NAVAJO JEWELRY OF THE YAZZIE FAMILY


THROUGH JAN. 10, 2016 *THE GLITTERING WORLD GALLERY STORE, LOCATED WITHIN THE EXHIBITION, WILL COMPLEMENT THE SHOW AND OFFER FINE JEWELRY FOR SALE.


CIRCLE OF DANCE THROUGH OCT. 8, 2017


INFINITY OF NATIONS: ART AND HISTORY IN THE COLLECTIONS OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE AMERICAN INDIAN ONGOING


MERYL MCMASTER: SECOND SELF Through Dec. 11, Photo Gallery Meryl McMaster (Plains Cree Member of the Siksika Nation) is an emerging artist from Ottawa, Ont., whose work is comprised of visually stunning large-scale photography. This exhibition includes selections from Second Self, a playful but compelling series of portraits that engage with self-perception and constructed identity. This series was first exhibited in the United States in 2013 when McMaster was selected for RED: Eiteljorg Contemporary Art Fellowship, a biennial program of the Eiteljorg Museum in India- napolis, Ind., which honors contemporary Native artists through an exhibition, catalog, art purchases and cash prize.


CERAMICA DE LOS ANCESTROS: CENTRAL AMERICA’S PAST REVEALED Through January 2017, West Gallery This bilingual (English/Spanish) exhibition illuminates Central America’s diverse and dynamic ancestral heritage with a selection of more than 150 objects. For thousands of years, Central America has been home to vibrant civilizations, each with unique, sophisticated ways of life, value systems and arts. The ceramics these peoples left behind, combined with recent archaeological discoveries, help tell the stories of these dynamic cultures and their achievements. Ceramica de los Ancestros examines seven regions representing distinct Central American cultural areas that are today part of Belize, Guatemala, Honduras, El Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica and Panama. Spanning the period from 1000 BC to the present, the featured ceramics, selected from the Museum’s collection of more than 12,000 pieces from the region, are augmented with


SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION 57 EXHIBITIONS:


Caribbean male figure, 1000-1500 AD. Las Mercedes, Limon Province, Costa Rica. Scoria. Excavated in 1916–1917 by Museum of the American Indian staff member Alanson B. Skinner. 07/3430.


PHOTO BY JOSHUA STEVENS


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