Sep 30 Tuesday
Al-Anon is for family and friends who have been affected by another's drinking or drug addiction.
Drawing from the University Art Museum's extensive collection of over 2,200 Mexican retablos, Trinities of Heaven and Earth explores the spiritual and cultural importance of these sacred images. Retablos, small devotional paintings traditionally displayed in Mexican homes, served as vital expressions of Catholic faith and values within the household. The imagery of the Holy Family conveys blessings related to family life, while depictions of the Holy Trinity invoke divine guidance. Together, these themes explore the connection between sacred devotion and earthly life, bridging the divine and the domestic.
The exhibition will open on March 21, 2025, at 5:30 pm in the Margie and Bobby Rankin Retablo Gallery, and will be open until March 7, 2026.
Al-Anon is for family and friends affected by someone else's drinking or drug use.
Oct 01 Wednesday
Social time with coffee and goodies followed by a speaker on a topic of interest to the Parkinson's community. Caregivers as well as those diagnosed with Parkinson's are cordially invited.
Fort Selden Historic Site offers weekly ranger-guided walking tours. Participants will explore 1400 years of history beginning with the Mogollon, foragers turned farmers, who lived on this land as early as 400 A.D. to the Spanish in the late 1500s to the American military in the mid-1800s. The tour is included as part of general admission of $5 per adult. Children 16 years old and younger are free. NM residents over the age of 60 are free on Wednesdays.
Oct 02 Thursday
Graduate students of New Mexico State University’s Arts Department present Passage, a mixed-media exhibition in conjunction with Imagining America’s 2025 national conference, Providing Passage: Practicing the Worlds We Want.
Works on display recontextualize transition and the idea of moving from one place to another through a diverse range of mediums—whether examining abandoned architecture as conduits between desolation and habitation, the frustrating liminality between imperfect memory and reality, or the degradation of traditional craftsmanship over time in the wake of globalization—the subject at the heart of each artist’s inquiry revolves around movement.
We invite you to intersect with us for a brief moment along our individual paths through memory, time, and place.
Participating artists: Gracie Beauregard, Sinnae Choi, Ivan Esperanza, Jacob Gyamfi, Allie Hale, Julieanna Lerma, Celeste Croteaux, Ezekiel Martey, Yvette Muchalak, Danny Joe Rose III, and Andrew Williams
Passage will be on view in the Serafino Gallery of Devasthali Hall from Oct. 2nd–5th. Opening reception will be held on Friday, October 3rd, 5–7 PM.