Spring 2016

100 Years And Counting: Reflections About A Collection, A Collector And The Museum Of The American Indian (Before There Was An NMAI)

A century ago, the wealthy investor George Gustav Heye chartered a foundation and museum that, through ups and downs, eventually evolved into the National Museum of the American Indian. When federal legislation rescued his extremely valuable but troubled institution, it also introduced the Native viewpoint into museum practice.

Spring 2016

The modern revival of ledger art forms a link between the historic drawings of 19th-century warriors, in U.s. captivity or otherwise, who recorded events of their lives in used account books, and present-day Native artists recapturing the beauty and simplicity of their ancestor's work. The Museum holds notable examples of these past and present art-works, some specially commissioned for the collection, and will feature them in the exhibition Unbound: Narrative Art of the Plains, on view at New York’s George Gustav Heye Center from March 12 through December 4.