Driving up the steep gravel driveway at Forge Project—a nonprofit Indigenous arts initiative in Ancram, New York—first you see, then you hear, the landscape. In the late-summer sun, black-eyed Susans, ...
Fellowship winners (clockwise, from top left): Margeaux Abeyta (Taos Pueblo and Diné), Rachel Martin (Tlingít), Brent Michael Davids (Mohican/Munsee-Lenape), Lucy ...
Brent Michael Davids / Image provided by the artist. The Forge Project, a regional Native-led organization focused on decolonial education and Indigenous art, recently announced the winners of its ...
When Forge Project was established in 2021, near Taghkanic in rural Columbia County, it already held an impressive collection of work by contemporary Indigenous artists. These included an imposing ...
Fellowship winners (clockwise, from top left): Delbert Anderson (Navajo/Diné), Schon Matthew Duncan (United Keetoowah Band of the Cherokee Indians), Donna Hogerhuis (Stockbridge-Munsee), Lindsay ...
Forge Project—the New York-based social-justice initiative founded to support Indigenous art, culture and decolonial education—is transitioning to a non-profit model that leaders believe will help the ...
The Forge Project, based in the Hudson Valley, is Becky Gochman’s initiative to raise the profile of the artists and find homes for their work in collections and museums. By Ted Loos ANCRAM, N.Y. — ...
Forge Project’s collection contains work by contemporary Indigenous artists. Thatcher Keats/Courtesy Forge Project For the past three years, New York’s Forge Project has focused on advancing and ...
Forge Project 2024 fellowship winners (clockwise from top left): Delbert Anderson (Navajo/Diné), Schon Matthew Duncan (United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians), Donna Hogerhuis (Stockbridge-Munsee), ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results