January Pante Project

Indian Pueblo Kitchen 2401 12th St NW, Albuquerque, NM, United States

Chef Ray Naranjo’s Pante Project is a monthly event in which you can order a pre-prepared, Indigenous dinner online and pick it up contact-free, curbside at IPCC and in Santa Fe. Through an online video, Chef Ray will show you how the meal was prepared and explain the food’s cultural meaning...

$60

Tour Tuesday

Online

Free Video tours of the museum and grounds every Tuesday!

Contemporary Indigenous Valentine’s Experience

For the month of February, IPCC’s Indian Pueblo Kitchen Executive Chef Ray Naranjo (Santa Clara, Odawa) has put together something special with the Contemporary Indigenous Valentine's Experience.  This one-of-a-kind, pre-prepared dinner-for-two package is an at-home culinary experience with an enticing three course menu that includes your choice of two entrees.

$120

Contemporary Indigenous Valentine’s Experience

For the month of February, IPCC’s Indian Pueblo Kitchen Executive Chef Ray Naranjo (Santa Clara, Odawa) has put together something special with the Contemporary Indigenous Valentine's Experience.  This one-of-a-kind, pre-prepared dinner-for-two package is an at-home culinary experience with an enticing three course menu that includes your choice of two entrees.

$120

Tour Tuesday: HERitage, Ancestors

Monthly, informative, guided video tours with Indian Pueblo Cultural Center staff through various elements of our museum. In this month’s video, learn more about the making of our HERitage exhibit

Peri Pakroo Workshop 2: Managing Clients and Contracts

Online

In this session (2/25) you'll focus on how to work effectively with clients, starting with solid contracts that protect your interests and establish clear expectations and workflows. 

View into the Collection

Online

Tune in monthly for a behind the scenes sneak peek of the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center's Collections with host and Curator of Collections, Amy G. Johnson (Isleta).

Indigenous Wisdom Curriculum Professional Devleopment Training

The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (IPCC) and Bernalillo Public School District’s Indian Education Department, are jointly hosting five monthly Indigenous Wisdom Curriculum Project professional development training webinars for Bernalillo District teachers, support staff, and administrators

Tour Tuesday: HERitage, Foundational Matriarchs

Online

Monthly, informative, guided video tours with Indian Pueblo Cultural Center staff through various elements of our museum. In this month’s video, learn more about the making of our HERitage exhibit and hear curator, Rachel Moore's personal insights and stories learned from the families of the three foundational matriarchs featured in the exhibit...

Indigenous Collections and Connections: Journeys and Pathways

Online

Read the latest blog from our library highlighting the work of remarkable indigenous Women from Representative Deb Haaland (Laguna Pueblo) to film maker Merata Mita (Maori) and some fun from Buffy Sainte-Marie (Cree)...

Counter Narrative: RadioActive IN New Mexico

Online

The Counter Narrative is a safe space to unbox and discuss trending, difficult, misunderstood, and often divisive topics. Join the IPCC in a three-month long series on RadioActive in New Mexico. In this series we will be unboxing Nuclear Science and History in New Mexico from the Pueblo Perspective. See what is in store for this session...

March Pante Project

Indian Pueblo Kitchen 2401 12th St NW, Albuquerque, NM, United States

Chef Ray Naranjo’s Pante Project is a monthly event in which you can order a pre-prepared, Indigenous dinner online and pick it up contact-free, curbside at IPCC and in Santa Fe. Through an online video, Chef Ray will show you how the meal was prepared and explain the food’s cultural meaning...

$60

Women’s Heritage Award and Ceremonies

Online

As part of National Women’s History Month, the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center is pleased to award our Pueblo Women’s Heritage Recognition Award for Service, Leadership, and the Arts to the Honorable Deb Haaland (Laguna) in order to recognize her outstanding public service as one of the first Indigenous members of the U.S. House of Representatives. We plan to honor her accomplishments with a special dance performance and guest speakers.

View into the Collection: Pueblo Women Past Honorees

Online

Tune in monthly for a behind the scenes sneak peek of the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center's Collections with host and Curator of Collections, Amy G. Johnson (Isleta). This month she highlights portraits and works of past recipients of IPCC’s Annual Pueblo Women’s Heritage Recognition Award Program.

Indigenous Wisdom Curriculum Professional Development Training

The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center (IPCC) and Bernalillo Public School District’s Indian Education Department, are jointly hosting five monthly Indigenous Wisdom Curriculum Project professional development training webinars for Bernalillo District teachers, support staff, and administrators

Teaching K-12 Controversial History and Indigenous Perspectives

Online

Join the University of New Mexico Institute for American Indian Education as they host their monthly Brown Bag Series. This month, hear presentations from the Indian Pueblo Cultural Center’s Indigenous Wisdom Curriculum Writers Azelle Humetewa (Kewa, Acoma), Christine Sims (Acoma), Glenebah Martinez (Taos, Dine), Natalie Martinez (Laguna), and Shannon Romero (Cochiti, Kewa, Dine). Presentations will cover lessons developed to discuss and teach about controversial historical markers and monuments in public spaces.

Indigenous Collections and Connections: Native Poets

This month’s blog from the IPCC’s Library and Archives will celebrate National Poetry Month with a feature on Joy Harjo, Muscogee (Creek). Additionally, the blog will highlight Native poets, including Pueblo poets.

Tour Tuesday: Heritage, Generations of Knowledge

This month’s video will explore the last section of our HERitage exhibit with Curator Rachel Moore (Hopi). We examine the direct effects of generational knowledge passed from mother to daughter to granddaughter, as seen in three featured families stemming from Lucy Lewis (Acoma), Maria Martinez (San Ildefonso), and Rose Naranjo (Santa Clara).