Arts of Indigenous America

Cost

Check the website for ticket prices

Organizer's Site

www.famsf.org/

Event Series Dates

Through December 6, 2026

Event Schedule

November 2025

  • Saturday 15th 9:30 AM
  • Sunday 16th 9:30 AM
  • Tuesday 18th 9:30 AM
  • Wednesday 19th 9:30 AM
  • Thursday 20th 9:30 AM
  • Friday 21st 9:30 AM
  • Saturday 22nd 9:30 AM
  • Sunday 23rd 9:30 AM
  • Tuesday 25th 9:30 AM
  • Wednesday 26th 9:30 AM
  • Thursday 27th 9:30 AM
  • Friday 28th 9:30 AM
  • Saturday 29th 9:30 AM
  • Sunday 30th 9:30 AM

December 2025

  • Tuesday 2nd 9:30 AM
  • Wednesday 3rd 9:30 AM
  • Thursday 4th 9:30 AM
  • Friday 5th 9:30 AM
  • Saturday 6th 9:30 AM
  • Sunday 7th 9:30 AM

The de Young's Arts of Indigenous America galleries, have been reimaged. Celebrating the vibrancy and diversity of Indigenous American art, this new presentation features beloved collection highlights alongside major acquisitions and commissions by contemporary artists. In the most extensive reinstallation of this collection in 20 years, each of the four refreshed galleries explores a different aspect of the theme “Relationship to Place.”

Upcoming Events

January 22 @ 11:00 am - 4:00 pm -
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$0.00 - $7.00

Hollyhock House Tours

Experience the interior of Hollyhock House at your own pace with a self-guided tour. Docents are on hand to provide information and answer questions.

January 18 @ 12:00 pm - 5:00 pm -
Check the website for ticket price

Noé Montes: Regional History

Photographer Noé Montes presents Regional History, a body of work documenting the landscapes, people, and cultural narratives of the Inland Empire. The exhibition reflects on identity, migration, and the layered histories that shape Southern California.

January 18 @ 11:00 am - 4:00 pm -
Adults - $5, Seniors and Students - $3, Members and Children under 12 - Free

Our Bodies Are Memories of Our Bodies: Siapo ma Solo

siapo—indigenous Samoan barkcloth abstraction—and solo—poetry in the Samoan genre and worldview, here composed in English—by Fa’afafine, non-binary Samoan artist Dan Taulapapa McMullin. Printed on cloth with ink painting, these works embody the fa’asamoa understanding that the body itself is an archive, carrying ancestral and personal memory through the mana of social and environmental relationships.