American Indian Artists Inc. (AMERINDA)
American Indian Artists Inc. (AMERINDA), established in 1987, is a community-based multi-arts organization that works to empower Native Americans, break down barriers and foster intercultural understanding and appreciation for Native culture through its arts programs and services to individual artists. AMERINDA‘s mission is to promote the indigenous perspective in the arts to a broad audience through the creation of new work in contemporary art forms—visual, performing, literary and media.
American Indian Council of Architects and Engineers
The AICAE is a non-profit corporation established in 1976. Its membership is comprised of American Indian architecture, engineering, and design professionals throughout the United States of America.
Arizona State University Center for Imagination in the Boderlands Fellowship
The Borderlands Fellowships are biennial fellowships for two individual artists/scholars/thinkers that pair the distinct institutional resources of the Center for Imagination in the Borderlands and the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School in New York City in order to support research projects that create communities across different geographical, cultural, and political landscapes engaging the public as well as students at both sites. The fellowships will focus on the relevance of place, thus seeking to support and apply an Indigenous lens to reflect on questions of borderlands.
A working group of tribal practitioners, tribal members, museum professionals, and academics, have worked to create this website as an educational tool for people seeking to understand the process and diversity of returning ancestral remains and cultural items as well as the impact of repatriation on Indigenous communities around the world.
D’Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies
Founded in 1972, the D'Arcy McNickle Center for American Indian and Indigenous Studies brings together scholars, teachers, students, tribal historians, and Native community members to promote research and improve the representation of Native peoples and histories in education and writing.
Forge Project is a Native-led initiative centered on Indigenous art, decolonial education, and supporting leaders in culture, food security, and land justice. Located on the unceded homelands of the Muh-he-con-ne-ok in Upstate New York, Forge Project works to upend political and social systems formed through generations of settler colonialism.
Institute of American Indian Arts Research Center for Contemporary Native Arts
The Institute of American Indian Arts established the IAIA Research Center for Contemporary Native Arts (RCCNA) to support IAIA’s dedication to advancing scholarship, discourse, and interpretation of contemporary Native art for regional, national, and international audiences. RCCNA streamlines access to the IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (MoCNA) permanent collection and the IAIA archives by providing a “one-stop-shop” to students, artists, scholars, and community members.
Native American Media Alliance
The foundation serves Native American content creators with professional development programs that include the Native American TV Writers Lab, the Native American Feature Film Writers Lab, the Native American Animation Lab, the Native American Showrunner Program, and the Native Youth Multimedia Workshop. The foundation also oversees an annual Native American film festival, the LA SKINS FEST, based in Los Angeles.
Native Arts and Cultures Foundation
The Native Arts and Cultures Foundation advances equity and cultural knowledge, focusing on the power of arts and collaboration to strengthen Native communities and promote positive social change with American Indian, Native Hawaiian, and Alaska Native peoples in the United States.
Redhawk Native American Arts Council
The Redhawk Native American Arts Council is a not-for-profit organization founded and maintained by Indigenous American artists, performers, and educators residing in New York and New Jersey. Since 1994, Redhawk has been dedicated to supporting the urban Indigenous community and educating the general public about Indigenous American heritage through song, dance, theater, and other works of art and cultural forms of expression with a diverse group of Indigenous artists from the Americas to around the globe.
UCLA American Indian Studies Center
The AISC serves as a hub of activities for Indigenous students, staff, faculty, alumni, and community, as well as serving as a bridge between the academy and indigenous peoples locally, nationally, and internationally.
UCLA American Indian Studies Center Library
The American Indian Studies Center Library is a focused special collection of books, journals, newspapers, and other core materials of importance to the study of American Indian peoples. The collection contains a wide range of subjects, including history, law, social relations, expressive arts, languages and literature.
Funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Native Hawaiian Pacific Islander Museum Institute (NHPIMI) provided early to mid-career professional development to 20 Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islanders working in museums and cultural heritage centers in Hawaiʻi and the Pacific, including Hawaiʻi, Guam, American Samoa, the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands, the Republic of Marshall Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, and Palau. Presented by the University of Hawai‘i and the East-West Center, and in partnership with the Pacific Islands Museums Association, the institute focused on three distinct but related areas: (1) collections care; (2) conservation; and (3) exhibitions.
Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (Albuquerque, New Mexico) - Focuses on the culture of the 19 Pueblo tribes of New Mexico.
The Heard Museum (Phoenix, Arizona) - Dedicated to American Indian art, it features collections and exhibitions, as well as educational programs.
The National Museum of the American Indian (Washington, D.C. and New York City) - Part of the Smithsonian Institution, showcasing the diversity of American Indian cultures.
Santa Fe Indian Market (Santa Fe, New Mexico) - An annual market that includes numerous artists and art dealers from various tribes.
The Institute of American Indian Arts (Santa Fe, New Mexico) - Offers degrees in American Indian art and culture and features exhibitions by students and faculty.
Red Cloud Indian School (Pine Ridge, South Dakota) - Features art from Oglala Lakota students and offers educational programs about Native culture.
The Plains Indian Museum (Cody, Wyoming) - Preserves and promotes the art and culture of Plains Indian tribes.
Blackfeet Nation Art Gallery (Browning, Montana) - Focuses on artwork from the Blackfeet Nation and local Native artists.
The Autry Museum of the American West (Los Angeles, California) - Features exhibitions on Native American culture and art.
Indian Arts Research Center - A program of the School for Advanced Research in Santa Fe, it holds collections and research related to Native American art.
The National Museum of the American Indian (Washington, D.C. and New York City) - Part of the Smithsonian Institution, this museum offers extensive collections and exhibitions showcasing the art, history, and culture of Native peoples.
Heard Museum (Phoenix, Arizona) - Renowned for its collection of Native American art, particularly from the Southwestern tribes, with regular exhibitions and cultural events.
The Autry Museum of the American West (Los Angeles, California) - Features exhibitions that explore the art and history of the American West, including Native American art.
The Denver Art Museum (Denver, Colorado) - Houses a significant collection of Native American art and often hosts temporary exhibitions focusing on various aspects of Native culture.
Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (Albuquerque, New Mexico) - Highlights the art and culture of the Pueblo people, with rotating exhibitions and art education programs.
The Portland Art Museum (Portland, Oregon) - Includes a collection of Native American art and often features exhibitions focusing on Indigenous artists.
The Philbrook Museum of Art (Tulsa, Oklahoma) - Hosts a range of American art, including significant Native American works, with changing exhibitions.
The Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (Santa Fe, New Mexico) - Focuses on contemporary Native American artists and their works.