The Haley Gallery at the Country Music Hall of Fame® and Museum, in collaboration with the IndigeNash Collective and The Forge Nashville, will exhibit the work of Navajo artist Jeremy Salazar. We’re Still Here will include painted and photographic works that highlight Salazar’s evolving artistic practice while reflecting his longstanding connection to Nashville’s Indigenous arts community. The exhibition is free and open to the public beginning the evening of July 16 through Sept. 11. More Tennessee Event Venue News
Raised on the Navajo Nation in New Mexico, Salazar is a self-taught artist whose distinctive visual language merges expressive abstraction with moments of striking realism. Through his studio moniker, Three Feather Studios, he has gained national recognition for contemporary Native artwork that centers Indigenous perspectives, celebrates lived experience and expands conventional narratives surrounding Native identity. Whether working in paint or through photography, Salazar draws upon personal memory, community and places of significance to create work that is both intimate and culturally grounded. Over the past three years, he has exhibited as part of the annual IndigeNash Festival at both The Forge Nashville and The Untitled Nashville Hotel at Bankers Alley.
The Forge is a non-profit arts organization that advocates for Nashville artists and makers and provides both a pathway and a physical space for creators to pursue their work in community. The organization is the acting fiscal sponsor for the IndigeNash Collective, a Nashville-based Indigenous arts initiative dedicated to elevating Native artists, storytellers and culture bearers while building an inclusive community through exhibitions, performances, public programming and the annual IndigeNash Festival.
All work on view in the Haley Gallery is available for purchase. Prices and details are available upon request.
On Thursday, July 16, the gallery will host a reception with the artist to celebrate the exhibition’s opening. The reception, which will take place between 5 and 8 p.m., is free and open to the public. More information on the event and the exhibition can be found on the Haley Gallery’s website.
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