Albuquerque Museum Receives Prestigious Grant from the National Endowment for the Arts

Grant to support upcoming exhibition, Broken Boxes: A Decade of Art, Action, and Dialog

January 24, 2024 – ALBUQUERQUE, NM: The Albuquerque Museum Foundation, on behalf of the Albuquerque Museum, has received a $30,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), an independent federal agency that is the largest funder of the arts and arts education in communities nationwide and a catalyst of public and private support for the arts. This grant will support the Museum’s upcoming exhibition, Broken Boxes: A Decade of Art, Action, and Dialog, and help commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Broken Box podcast, which is dedicated to the transmission of ideas among working artists. The grant will also provide support honorariums for artists, performances, and audio/visual needs.

Broken Boxes: A Decade of Art, Action, and Dialog, co-curated by Ginger Dunnill, Broken Boxes Podcast Founder, and Dr. Josie Lopez, Head Curator at the Albuquerque Museum, will open at the Albuquerque Museum on September 7, 2024, and run through March 2, 2025. The exhibition will include large-scale installation works, a video exhibition room, an interactive education room, and public engagement programs including artists performing music and in conversation. A book published by the University of New Mexico Press will expand upon the exhibition and podcast by using podcast conversation points to celebrate the artists' works and lives in their own words, while providing reflections and responses on their peers' practices, further transmitting ideas between artists. 

The exhibition will feature 23 artists and include programming for Third Thursday events along with opening and closing events.  

“For over a decade, Ginger Dunnill’s Broken Boxes Podcast has amplified the voices of contemporary artists at the forefront of global and local community engagement. Participating artists have also forged friendships through collaboration, activism, and dialog with each other,” said Dr. Josie Lopez, Albuquerque Museum Head Curator. “This exhibition celebrates a project that brings together these artists who share their respective artistic practices while activating new ways of building the future.”

Lopez continues, “Working closely with Ginger Dunnill to curate both the exhibition and an exciting slate of programs demonstrates how ambitious museum exhibitions can reflect on activism across cultures, place, and time, and also present exciting new approaches to making art.”

This exhibition is a celebration of ten years of the Broken Boxes Podcast, a social engagement project that was created in 2014 in Santa Fe, New Mexico, by Ginger Dunnill, a multidisciplinary artist. Promoting safe space, healing, and solidarity, Dunnill strives to honor the intersections where stories overlap, refusing to “box us out of each other’s narratives.” The format allows for human connection between artists, while exploring each artist’s identity. 

The podcast explores the ideas and artwork that challenge the rules, traditions, and imposed narratives that limit our society. Highlighting BIPOC, LGBTQ+, and Activism-based visual artists as well as musicians, advocates, performance artists, and art collectives, the podcast gives insight into the motivations behind each artist’s work and how it affects change. The long-format conversations offer personal stories into each artist’s process in creating his/her/their artwork and how culture plays a role. Interviews are done on location, as well as virtually. Dunnill travels throughout the state to meet working Indigenous artists whose stories need to be shared in the global conversation about contemporary art.

The longevity of the Broken Boxes podcast is substantial, and Dunnill’s work as an artist will be recognized, and utilized, in creating this new exhibition. Dunnill and Lopez’s collaborative curatorial concept will bring works by the artists together in dialogue with each other and with the artist’s words from the podcasts.

“This prestigious grant will make a big difference for the Albuquerque Museum’s 2024-2025 season by extending the outreach for Broken Boxes: A Decade of Art, Action, and Dialog,” said Andrew Rodgers, President and CEO of Albuquerque Museum Foundation. “This exhibit will enrich our community and encourage attendees to ‘think outside the box’ while also encouraging an important dialogue.”

“The Albuquerque Museum is a cultural cornerstone in our community, highlighting our history, identity, and artistic expression,” said Mayor Tim Keller. “Recognition from the NEA underscores the museum's commitment to preserving our heritage for generations to come.” The Museum last received a grant from the NEA in 2005. It has also received a grant from the Andy Warhol Foundation in support of this exhibition. 

ABOUT THE NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE ARTS: The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), established in Congress in 1965, is an independent federal agency that is the largest funder of the arts and arts education in communities nationwide and a catalyst of public and private support for the arts. By advancing equitable opportunities for arts participation and practice, the NEA fosters and sustains an environment in which the arts benefit everyone in the United States. To find out more about how National Endowment for the Arts grants impact individuals and communities, visit www.arts.gov.

ABOUT THE ALBUQUERQUE MUSEUM: As a cornerstone of our community, the Albuquerque Museum cares for important collections of art and history, presented through well-curated exhibitions and programs that inspire and promote learning across cultures. Its vision is to expand the quality and scope of its collections; elevate the understanding of our city, our state, and the greater Southwest; and engage Albuquerque with a global community. The Albuquerque Museum is a division of the Department of Arts and Culture, City of Albuquerque. To learn more, visit www.cabq.gov/artsculture/albuquerque-museum .

ABOUT THE FOUNDATION: The Albuquerque Museum Foundation is an independent, non-profit corporation that provides annual funding and volunteer support for the Albuquerque Museum, a municipally run and operated museum of art and history. The Foundation champions the Museum’s exceptional exhibitions, educational programs, and acquisitions. Visit http://www.albuquerquemuseumfoundation.org / for more information.

Content on the Beat

WARNING: All articles and photos with a byline or photo credit are copyrighted to the author or photographer. You may not use any information found within the articles without asking permission AND giving attribution to the source. Photos can be requested and may incur a nominal fee for use personally or commercially.

Disclaimer: If you find errors in articles not written by the Beat team but sent to us from other content providers, please contact the writer, not the Beat. For example, obituaries are always provided by the funeral home or a family member. We can fix errors, but please give details on where the error is so we can find it. News releases from government and non-profit entities are posted generally without change, except for legal notices, which incur a small charge.

NOTE: If an article does not have a byline, it was written by someone not affiliated with the Beat and then sent to the Beat for posting.

Images: We have received complaints about large images blocking parts of other articles. If you encounter this problem, click on the title of the article you want to read and it will take you to that article's page, which shows only that article without any intruders. 

New Columnists: The Beat continues to bring you new columnists. And check out the old faithfuls who continue to provide content.

Newsletter: If you opt in to the Join GCB Three Times Weekly Updates option above this to the right, you will be subscribed to email notifications with links to recently posted articles.

Submitting to the Beat

Those new to providing news releases to the Beat are asked to please check out submission guidelines at https://www.grantcountybeat.com/about/submissions. They are for your information to make life easier on the readers, as well as for the editor.

Advertising: Don't forget to tell advertisers that you saw their ads on the Beat.

Classifieds: We have changed Classifieds to a simpler option. Check periodically to see if any new ones have popped up. Send your information to editor@grantcountybeat.com and we will post it as soon as we can. Instructions and prices are on the page.

Editor's Notes

It has come to this editor's attention that people are sending information to the Grant County Beat Facebook page. Please be aware that the editor does not regularly monitor the page. If you have items you want to send to the editor, please send them to editor@grantcountybeat.com. Thanks!

Here for YOU: Consider the Beat your DAILY newspaper for up-to-date information about Grant County. It's at your fingertips! One Click to Local News. Thanks for your support for and your readership of Grant County's online news source—www.grantcountybeat.com

Feel free to notify editor@grantcountybeat.com if you notice any technical problems on the site. Your convenience is my desire for the Beat.  The Beat totally appreciates its readers and subscribers!  

Compliance: Because you are an esteemed member of The Grant County Beat readership, be assured that we at the Beat continue to do everything we can to be in full compliance with GDPR and pertinent US law, so that the information you have chosen to give to us cannot be compromised.