Indigenous Arts Night
The Yale Native American Cultural Center presents the third annual Indigenous Arts Night.
Celebrate music, visual art, dance, poetry, and more forms of creative imagination with Emcee Jairus Rhoades.
The Yale Native American Cultural Center presents the third annual Indigenous Arts Night.
Celebrate music, visual art, dance, poetry, and more forms of creative imagination with Emcee Jairus Rhoades.
Join us during Family Weekend in The Underground. The showcase will feature visual art and written pieces on display, as well as performances by Latine/x individuals/groups ranging from comedy and music to dancing and speeches. . We are looking to celebrate Latine/x people in all spaces, to showcase all voices, talents, and achievements.
Join us at the first Yale Powwow since 2018! Sharing space with Eid and Earth Day, the powwow will take place on April 22nd, 2023 from 12pm-6pm at the Lanman Center on Yale’s campus!! In celebration of the powwow’s return, our first powwow since 2018, we’ve opted for a theme of Roots and Regrowth.
Come as we gather to celebrate the tremendous accomplishments of our Black graduates across the college, graduate, and professional schools.
Natalie Ball was born and raised in Portland, Oregon. She attained her Mater of Fine Arts in Painting and Printmaking at Yale School of Art in 2018. Her work has been shown internationally and she is the recipient of the 2020 Bonnie Bronson Award, a 2019 Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, and 2018 Betty Bowen Award (Seattle Art Museum), among other honors.
Join us at the first Yale Powwow since 2018! Sharing space with Eid and Earth Day, the powwow will take place on April 22nd, 2023 from 12pm-6pm at the Lanman Center on Yale’s campus!! In celebration of the powwow’s return, our first powwow since 2018, we’ve opted for a theme of Roots and Regrowth.
This Saturday, April 8th from 2-5 pm, there will be an opening reception for HUI, a Native Hawaiian Art Exhibition.
HUI will be on from April 8 - May 7 located on the third level of the Native American Cultural Center.
Laugh and chat with comedian and Emmy-nominated writer Karen Chee on Thursday, April 6. Described as “unflinchingly cheery, happily ironic, [and] socially perceptive” (Harvard Magazine), Karen brings a young perspective and unique voice that draws her Korean-American heritage into her work.
Amneris Chaparro, Rice Fellow at the MacMillan Center, will present this talk as part of the CLAIS Colloquium Series 22-23.
Join us for a conversation with Yale College Dean Pericles Lewis and Professor Anjelica Gonzalez on how basic science becomes impactful through a focus on human needs. Prof. Gonzalez is Associate Professor of Biomedical Engineering, Head of Davenport College, and Faculty Director at Tsai Center for Innovative Thinking at Yale. Her work focuses on engineering solutions for human diseases not addressed well in animal models. Prof. Gonzalez is co-founder of Aero Therapeutics, a company that develops respiratory devices for infants.