Creative Continuum: 60 Years of the Native Art Center

January 31 through September 27, 2026


Sixty years ago, the Native Art Center was founded in response to a need, as is often the case, to preserve, teach, and extend the living arts of Alaska Native cultures. From the beginning and under the guidance of Ron Senungetuk, the Center has grown into a place where lineage and innovation, tradition and experimentation, elders and students all share a space. Creative Continuum honors this complex, living history.

The Native Art Center at the ҹɫ¸£Àû is dedicated to the preservation, promotion, and advancement of Alaska Native art and culture. The Center provides a dynamic and inclusive environment where students can explore traditional and contemporary art forms, ensuring the continuation of ancestral knowledge while fostering innovation.

Kathleen Carlo-Kendall

Owl Mask, 2010, Kathleen Carlo-Kendall.

Umealiq 2009 by Ronald W. Senungetuk

Umealiq, 2009, by Ronald W. Senungetuk.

Moose Mother, 2022, by Sky Roehl

Moose Mother, 2022, by Sky Roehl

 

This exhibition is not simply a look back through the public and private collections. It is both an acknowledgement of what has been, with its triumphs, struggles, and transformations, and a way forward, engaging how Native artists, mentored by those who came before, are shaping what comes next. In putting together this retrospective, I have thought deeply about mentorship: how a moment of teaching, a shared tool, or a conversation in the Center can ripple out in unexpected ways.

The real heart of the Native Art Center has always been its students. What I am most proud of is not only their works, but that many have gone on to teach, to lead, to carry their cultures outward into their communities, schools, galleries, and museums. I am also struck by the family connections throughout the years as generations have moved through the Center.

Da-ka-xeen Mehner 

 


This exhibition has been made possible with the generous support of Explore Alaska, Carol and Terence Choy, the Hugh and Jane Ferguson Foundation, Alaska Airlines, and Advance Printing.

Explore Fairbanks

 

Alaska Airlines

Advanced Printing