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In the early 1990s, growing numbers of women were reported missing or found dead across the city of Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. Decades later advocates have documented more than 2,000 women were murdered yet none of their killers have been identified or convicted, according to the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Esther Chavez Cano in front of the women s shelter she founded. (Courtesy Photo) Newspaper clippings from the Esther Chavez Cano Collection housed inside the Rio Grande Historical Collections at New Mexico State Universitys Library Archives and Special Collections Department. (NMSU photo by Dennis Daily) Collection of documents part of the Esther Cano Chavez inside the Rio Grande Historical Collections at NMSU s Library Archives and Special Collections Department. Cano gathered newspaper clippings, magazines and photographs documenting the murders of women and girls, referred to as Femicides in Jua
The New Mexico State University Borderlands and Ethnic Studies, Chicano Programs and the Deans Fellows of Equity, Inclusion and Diversity at the College of Arts and Sciences are hosting a dialogue series titled, Imagining and Shaping Pluriversities: Land-based Indigenous Knowledges and Pedagogies of Resistance. (Clockwise from left) Pluriversity Imagination Collective members, Judith Flores Carmona, interim director of Chicano Programs, associate professor and faculty fellow in the Honors College; Manal Hamzeh, professor of gender and sexuality studies; Georgina Badoni, assistant professor of anthropology; and Dulcinea Lara, associate professor and director of Borderlands and Ethnic Studies program. (Courtesy Photo) (From left) Lisa Grayshield and Jennie Luna kicked off the series with their talk titled, Intersecting Momentum: A discussion about the History of Colonization and the Now of Healing Land and People. (Courtesy Photo)
The New Mexico State University Art Museum will host its first Spring 2021 virtual program in connection with their newest exhibition, Saint Joseph & The Laborers. The exhibit, curated by NMSU graduate student Courtney Uldrich, delves into the role of the laborer through the lens of Mexican retablo imagery. The exhibition will be on display in the Margie and Bobby Rankin Retablo Gallery by appointment from Feb. 20 through Nov. 6. The NMSU Art Museum will host a virtual retablo making workshop in conjunction with their newest exhibit, St Joseph & the Laborors, at 6 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 25 via Zoom. The exhibit will be on display in the Margie and Bobby Rankin Retablo Gallery by appointment from Feb. 20 through Nov. 6.
The New Mexico State University Department of Art will host a variety of artists from across the country as part of the virtual Visiting Artist and Scholar Lecture Series. The series will kick off with an online presentation by renowned New York based artist Michael Waugh at 6 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 27 via Zoom. New York based artist and lecturer as part of the virtual NMSU Visiting Artist and Scholar Lecture Series Michael Waughs drawing Redacted. 2020. (Courtesy Photo)
The Visiting Artist and Scholar Lecture Series is sponsored by the NMSU Department of Art in the College of Arts and Sciences and paid for by the Lilian Steinman Visiting Artist Fund. Due to COVID-19, the series was moved online.