Close Menu
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn
    • Subscribe
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    Indigenous art. Indigenous perspectives.
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn Pinterest
    First American Art Magazine
    • Home
    • About Us
      • Press
      • Distribution
      • Sponsors
      • Contact Us
      • Refund and Returns Policy
    • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
      • Archives
      • FAAM Index
    • Content
      • Articles
      • Blog
      • Reference
        • Acronyms
        • Art Terms
        • Artist and Scholar List: A–F
        • Museums, Galleries, and Other Art Venues
        • Timeline of Indigenous Art History of the Americas
    • Calendar
      • Submit an Event
    • Submissions
      • FAAM Style Guide
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe
      • Magazine
      • Monthly Newsletter
    0 Shopping Cart
    First American Art Magazine
    Home»Web Content»Blog»First Americans Museum Opens This Weekend!

    First Americans Museum Opens This Weekend!

    1
    By Stacy Pratt on September 16, 2021 Blog, Web Content
    First Americans Museum
    First Americans Museum entrance at dawn, featuring “Touch to Above,” a steel sculpture by Bill and Demos Glass (both Cherokee Nation). Photo: Ann Sherman, annshermanphoto.com.

    After decades of planning, challenges, and changes, First Americans Museum (FAM) opens this weekend, Sept. 18 and 19, in Oklahoma City, with music, poetry, dance, and much more.

    FAM is a magnificent 175,000 square-foot museum focused on the cultures, histories, and current stories of Oklahoma’s Native peoples. Executive Director James Pepper Henry (Kaw/Muscogee) leads the museum’s all-Native curatorial team and primarily Native staff.

    First Americans Museum
    FAM’s all–Native American curatorial team developed exhibitions in consultation with tribes and community members, such as Path of Warriors which honors veterans historic and living. Photo: Ann Sherman, annshermanphoto.com.

    Saturday’s opening ceremonies begin with a procession of representatives from all of Oklahoma’s 39 tribes — 38 federally recognized nations and the Yuchi people. Remarks from tribal, state, and museum leaders conclude with a reading by US Poet Laureate Joy Harjo (Mvskoke). Then the festivities begin: Harjo is among the singers, dancers, storytellers, and artists who will perform on the massive Festival Plaza on Saturday. Sunday also offers a roster of well-known Indigenous entertainers, including Pawnee/Choctaw rappers Li’l Mike and Funny Bone of Hulu’s Reservation Dogs.

    Dance performances, field games, a fashion show, artist talks, demonstrations, and more take place throughout the museum’s campus on both days. In the main building, visitors will be the first to experience large-scale commissioned artworks, interactive exhibitions, and Winiko: Life of an Object, a carefully curated collection of items from the National Museum of the American Indian (NMAI), Smithsonian Institute in Washington, DC.

    First Americans Museum
    The FAM Store will showcase art by Native artists from Oklahoma and across the nation. Photo: Ann Sherman, annshermanphoto.com.

    The FAM Store will offer exclusive artwork created by Native artists from Oklahoma and across the nation for purchase. A variety of local food trucks will be on the Festival Plaza, and the FAM sit-down restaurant and grab-and-go café will be open and serving Indigenous cuisine.

    First American Art Magazine is proud to be the media sponsor of FAM’s opening. Look for our table at the Xchange Theater with free stickers, bookmarks, and current and back issues to take home and share.

    A limited number of timed tickets can still be purchased for $5 on the FAM website, www.famok.org. Pandemic precautions, parking instructions, and other information can also be found there. No onsite parking during the weekend. Saturday’s hours will be 8:00 am to 10:00 pm; Sunday’s hours will be 8:00 am to 8:00 p.m.

    First Americans Museum
    View of the FAM’s Hall of the People from the mound. The glass-and-metal structure pays homage to the grass lodges of the original Indigenous peoples of Oklahoma: the Wichita and Affiliated Tribes and the Caddo Nation. Photo: Ann Sherman, annshermanphoto.com.

    Related Posts

    Launch Party 49 | First American Art Magazine Celebrates Issue No. 49

    January 26, 2026

    Edmonia Lewis: Said in Stone at the Peabody Essex Museum

    January 8, 2026

    Meet FAAM’s New Operations Manager, Jessica Ma’ilo

    December 22, 2025

    1 Comment

    1. Elizabeth Ellis on September 17, 2021 2:22 am

      Congratulations on your cultural achievement of a
      Museum for indigenous peoples, from Maori of Aotearoa New Zealand.

      Reply
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Woven in Wool, Burke Museum
    Water's Edge: The Art of Truman Lowe. Now Open. NMAI, Washington, DC
    Ancestral Edge at the Ringling Museum
    Sign up for FAAM Art Beat newsletter
    Sign up for FAAM Art Beat newsletter
    Cherokee Language Publishing
    Indigenous Editors Association
    Indigenous Editors Association
    Mission Statement

    First American Art Magazine, LLC (FAAM), broadens understanding of art by Indigenous peoples of the Americas from tribal communities to the global art world.

    Subscribe to FAAM Art Beat, our free monthly newsletter

    Vision Statement

    First American Art Magazine, LLC, strives to foster historical resilience, cross-cultural understanding, and reintegration of humans into the natural world.

    turtleshell rattle by Tommy Wildcat

    First American Art Magazine's offices are located within the ancestral homelands of the Wichita and Affiliated Tribes and the historic territories of the Muscogee Nation and the Seminole Nation of Oklahoma.

    Contact Us

    First American Art Magazine
    3334 W. Main St. #442
    Norman, OK 73072
    (405) 561-7655

    info@firstamerican.art
    ads@firstamerican.art
    circulation@firstamerican.art

    Site Admin

    © 2026 First American Art Magazine, LLC. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.