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From May 8 through July 10, 2026, New York University and The Berkley Collection will present The Declaration of Independence: Long Trail to Liberty. For extended hours and more, visit theberkley.org.

Grey Art Museum programming will resume on September 9, 2026, with by Alison Knowles: A Retrospective (1960–2022) and Making Music: Helen Frankenthaler Prints from the New York University Art Collection.
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A circular metal door handle with intricate floral carvings on a wooden-framed glass door. The glass reflects a landscape of trees and mountains at the Tekαkαpimək Contact Center.
Tekαkαpimək Contact Center door handles Tekαkαpimək Contact Center door handles
Wednesday, April 8, 2026 at 6:00PM

Conversation | Tekαkαpimək (As Far As One Can See): Indigenous Art, Cultural Authority, and Community Resilience

Longform Content

Join a delegation of Wabanaki artists, cultural leaders, and partners for an evening of visual storytelling and conversation about Tekαkαpimək Contact Station at Katahdin Woods and Waters National Monument, situated in the traditional and present-day homeland of the Penobscot Nation. Tekαkαpimək serves as an Indigenous-led model for place-based interpretation, cultural continuity, and the role of contemporary art in sustaining community resilience. Speakers will address how long-term relationships, community authority, and Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual Property (ICIP) frameworks make it possible to share language, stories, and site-specific knowledge within a permanent public space.

Presented in conjunction with the Grey Art Museum’s exhibition of contemporary Aboriginal painting from Papunya Tula, this program considers how Indigenous art and cultural practice can support self-determination, community resilience, and kinship relationships across time.

Participants

James Eric Francis Sr. (Penobscot), Director of Cultural and Historic Preservation, Penobscot Nation

Nick Francis (Penobscot), Executive Director, Wabanaki Community Foundation

Gabriel Frey (Passamaquoddy), basketmaker and artist

Suzanne Greenlaw (Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians), ecologist, artist, and writer

Jennifer Sapiel Neptune (Penobscot), basketmaker and writer

Lucas St. Clair, President, Elliotsville Foundation

Moderated by Prof. Jane Anderson (Anthropology and Museum Studies, New York University), co-founder of Local Contexts and Indigenous Intellectual and Cultural Property (ICIP) consultant.

Visitor Access & Registration

Please register to attend this event. For attendance without an active NYU ID card, RSVP by Tuesday, April 7 to guarantee building access.

Arrive early to view Irriṯitja Kuwarri Tjungu before the conversation—the exhibition will be open from 11 am to 8 pm on April 8.

NYU’s Grey Art Museum provides reasonable accommodations to people with disabilities. Requests for accommodations should be submitted at least two weeks in advance. Please email greyartmuseum@nyu.edu or call (212) 998-6780 for assistance.

Credits

Co-sponsored by NYU Liberal Studies; the Graduate Program in Museum Studies, NYU; and the Department of Anthropology, NYU.