News

RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) - Visitors coming in and out of Rapid City Regional Airport will now be able to indulge in 15 new ...
A Good Day’s Work” repositions Anna Mary Robertson “Grandma” Moses (1860–1961) as a multidimensional force in American art, whose beloved painted recollections of rural life earned her a distinctive ...
From the ancient cliff dwellings at Bandelier National Monument to the windswept peaks of Acoma Pueblo, Austin Peay State ...
The overlooked printmaker Blanche Lazzell, of West Virginia, deserves recognition as one of America's first Modernists and ...
TOPEKA, Kan. (WIBW) - A Topeka artist, known to infuse her Native American heritage into each piece, is being spotlighted ...
Poetry memoir invites readers into “Blindian Country”; experimental work by 20 Black artists at F-O-K Studios; Alex Yang’s” Weaving the Hmong Legacy” at the Xia Gallery.
Downtown Sulphur was once again a flurry of activity June 7 as the vibrant sights and sounds of the annual Artesian Arts Festival attracted thousands of art patrons and families.
One local artist showcases his personal art collection to the public, in hopes of finding each art piece a new home.
Researchers find errors in death certificates, say Native Americans and Alaska Natives live nearly four years less than statistics suggest — 72.7 years.
George Blue Spruce, right, the first known Native American dentist in the U.S., with his wife, Patricia Blue Spruce, at an Arizona Cardinals game. Blue Spruce died June 2 at 94.