Delaware Art Museum | "Living Indigenous" Curator Talk
Join the Delaware Art Museum Head Curator and Curator of Contemporary Art Margaret Winslow as she discusses the collaborative exhibition, Living Indigenous, developed in partnership with Nanticoke Indian Museum. The exhibition aims to create space for artists to explore and share what it means to be an Indigenous artist at the United States’ 250th anniversary. Utilizing the commemorative year, Living Indigenous will ensure that broader stories of the inhabitants of Turtle Island are centered, pairing intergenerational artists to share knowledge and history from the past and link those narratives to today. Living Indigenous is on display at DelArt from February 26 to August 23.
Margaret Winslow has brought a new focus to local art history and culture at DelArt since 2009. She curated the groundbreaking 2015 exhibition Dream Streets: Art in Wilmington 1970–1990. In 2018, Winslow led a city-wide effort to mark the 50th anniversary of the 1968 Wilmington uprisings and commissioned Hank Willis Thomas’s Black Survival Guide, or How to Live Through a Police Riot. She is currently working on Citizen Artist, an exhibition celebrating artist workers in America to mark the nation’s 250th anniversary in 2026.
Registration is required and each individual attending must register.
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