Sep 23 2017
Reception for Hope + Trauma in a Poisoned Land

Reception for Hope + Trauma in a Poisoned Land

at Coconino Center for the Arts

Hope and Trauma in a Poisoned Land will explore the impact of uranium mining on Navajo lands and people. The art exhibition will feature work by more than two dozen artists, including Navajo and Native artists. The show will be open to the public August 15 – October 28, 2017.

This event is a special public reception during the Flagstaff Festival of Science. Everyone is welcome to come and view the exhibition, talk with participating artists, and hear from the exhibition creators about the show. There will be live music, yummy food, and a cash bar.

Through the participating artists, Hope and Trauma will share stories and perspectives from Navajo people of their experiences due to radiation-related impacts to their bodies, their land, their water, their animals, and the natural materials and objects they use in their everyday lives. Art work will be based on a series of interactions, shared stories, and educational programs that took place in Cameron, Arizona, and in Flagstaff, in October 2016. Artists attended a four-day intensive education program which immersed them in the landscape where uranium mining and contamination has occurred on the Navajo Nation. They learned from Navajo community members, scientists, health care professionals, mental health professionals, and other experts about the impacts of uranium mining.

This blockbuster exhibition is funded in part through a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Admission Info

Free admission

Phone: 928 779-2300

Dates & Times

2017/09/23 - 2017/09/23

Location Info

Coconino Center for the Arts

2300 North Fort Valley Road, Flagstaff, AZ 86002

Parking Info

Parking available