MinerAlert
Join exhibiting artist Cynthia Gutierrez-Krapp for a hands-on bead weaving workshop inspired by her exhibition Strangers in Our Own Land. In this unique opportunity, participants will learn directly from the artist as she demonstrates how to warp a loom, read a weaving pattern, and create a miniature bead-woven version of her work Where I Am From.
Inspired by ancestral traditions and a shared love for the Chihuahuan Desert, participants will explore the fundamentals of bead weaving while creating their own woven piece. Along the way, Cynthia will share insights into her artistic practice and the ideas behind her work, making this a rare opportunity to engage with the exhibition through the artist's own creative process.
This workshop is free and open to the public, but space is extremely limited. Advance RSVP is required.
Memory can move through land, be held in materials, gestures, and acts of making. Strangers in Our Own Land presents new and recent works by Cynthia Gutierrez-Krapp, whose practice is grounded in processes of making shaped by place, lineage, and lived knowledge.
![]() |
Working primarily through objects, the exhibition invites viewers into a field of relations where material carries memory and making traces the movement of bodies and knowledge across time. For over a decade, Gutierrez-Krapp has explored her Diné/Navajo, Mescalero Apache, and Yaqui heritage, histories largely unknown to her until midlife. The silence surrounding these identities within her maternal line has become a generative force. Through making, she confronts erasure and trauma, opening space for healing, visibility, and reverence without settling into fixed narratives. Questions of guidance, ancestry, and movement remain embedded in material processes, returning attention to the hand, the land, and the ways knowledge is carried forward.
Curated by Senior Curator Andres Payan Estrada, this exhibition offers an intimate look at a practice shaped by intergenerational resilience, personal transformation, and the profound relationships between geographies and memory.
Supported by a generous Mellon Foundation grant, Genius Loci looks at the ways in which our local context informs artists’ practices. For more information about the Genius Loci exhibition series and selection process, CLICK HERE.
Artist and Curator Conversation: Wednesday, April 01
Coyote Stories with Alex Mares: Saturday, February 21