Where:
Museum of Fine Arts
465 Huntington Ave
Boston, MA
Admission:
FREE
Categories:
Art
Event website:
https://www.fenwayculture.org/ood-2023-schedule
Enjoy free admission all day and special events at MFA Boston’s Indigenous Peoples’ Day celebration.
Tickets available in person on a first-come, first-served basis. Admission is free with a valid Massachusetts zip code.
Join us to celebrate Indigenous Peoples’ Day at the MFA. This year, we’re offering free admission—including access to “Fashioned by Sargent”—for Massachusetts residents. Enjoy gallery tours, engaging family art-making activities, and more! Indigenous Peoples’ Day recognizes and honors the heritage of Native Americans and Indigenous peoples and the histories of their many nations and communities.
Events and Activities:
Resource Fair
10 am–4 pm
Shapiro Family Courtyard
Local partners the North American Indian Center of Boston (NAICOB), United American Indians of New England, Indigenous Peoples’ Day Massachusetts, Italian Americans for Indigenous Peoples’ Day and Cultural Survival Bazaar share information about their work and organizations.
Drop-In Art Making: Pottery
10 am–4 pm
Druker Studios, Linde Family Wing for Contemporary Art
Learn how to create your own pottery, inspired by the many traditions of pottery making in Native North America. This activity was created in consultation with Mashpee Wampanoag artist Haley Peters.
Free Guided Tours
11 am, Noon, and 1 pm
Meet at Sharf Visitor Center
Wondering where to start your visit? Experience the Museum on a free, 60-minute guided tour. Led by knowledgeable guides, look closely at artwork across the MFA’s collections. Learn more about old favorites and discover something new! Free and no registration is required. Participants of all ages and experiences are welcome.
Remarks and Land Acknowledgment
11 am
Shapiro Family Courtyard
Hear from Matthew Teitelbaum, Ann and Graham Gund Director; Marina Tyquiengco (CHamoru), Ellyn McColgan Associate Curator of Native American Art; and Jenny Oliver (Massachusett Tribe at Ponkapoag), Head of Dance Performance at Tufts University, as they welcome you to Indigenous Peoples’ Day.
Hawk Henries
11:30 am and 2 pm
Shapiro Family Courtyard
Hawk Henries is an artist, composer, and flute musician of the Chaubunagungamaug band of Nipmuc. He expertly crafts Eastern Woodlands flutes through ancestral and contemporary techniques. His transformative performances create contemplative spaces for unity and meaningful reflection on how we each have the capacity to make change in the world. Through music, discussion, and a note of humor, he weaves a calm, engaging, and thought-provoking experience.
Art-Making Demo by Haley Peters
Noon and 3 pm
Gallery 168
Haley Peters (Mashpee Wampanoag) utilizes traditional techniques of pinching and coiling clay to create forms that reference historic Eastern Woodland vessels. Inspired by how historical vessels were made, they often find joy in exaggerating and pushing these forms and methods to extremes.
Community Perspective: Penobscot Powder Horn
12:30 pm
Native North American Art Gallery, Gallery LG34
Alexandra Moleski (Penobscot) highlights a Penobscot powder horn on view in the Native North American Art Gallery. Alexandra graduated from Simmons University with a bachelor’s in public history and has a personal connection to Indigenous history. She is currently security operations project manager of the Protective Services department at the MFA.
Community Perspective: Diné Belongings and Stories
1 pm
Gallery 327
Shandiin Brown (Diné), Rhode Island School of Design Henry Luce Curatorial Fellow for Native American Art, highlights Diné belongings and stories in “A Little Bit of the Southwest.” Brown is a curator, creative, and citizen of the Navajo Nation from Arizona and a graduate of Dartmouth College.
Community Perspective: Guinaiya and Care
2:30 pm
Linde Family Wing for Contemporary Art, Level 2
Marina Tyquiengco (CHamoru), Ellyn McColgan Associate Curator of Native American Art, highlights and addresses the many forms of guinaiya (love) and care featured in CHamoru artist Gisela Charfauros McDaniel’s Tiningo’ si Sirena.
Screening of Hot Water Over Raised Fists: A Closer Look at Belonging
1:30 and 2:30 pm
Riley Seminar Room
Drawing on the legacy of resilience among Black Indigenous people and the artists’ desire to heal, mend, and deepen their connection to each other as Black Native women who belong to these lands, this choreographed film responds to the questions of belonging raised in the narratives written and voiced by the artists. Filmmakers Jenny Oliver and sadada jackson weave a complex tapestry that expresses their identities, relationship to place, and relationship to each other. Hot Water Over Raised Fists: A Closer Look at Belonging (14 mins., 2021) lays out the way they and their ancestors have lived in relationship to land that favors connection and belonging over unabated expansion and settlement.
Indigenous Peoples' Day at the MFA is part of the Fenway Alliance's Opening Our Doors festival, a celebration of the Fenway Cultural District.
Tuesday, Dec 31, 2024 9:00p
Sam Adams Taproom Downtown Boston