Henry Ford Museum of American Innovation, Ford Rouge Factory Tour and Giant Screen Experience will be closed Monday, March 16, for a day of staff learning and development. We appreciate your patience and understanding.

6 Items

Indigenous History

  • Protect Kids Not Guns by Micah Bazant, from the collections of the Henry Ford / 2018.88.5
    Collections - Article

    When Art and Activism Merge

    How does one interpret art? How does one view activism or protest? These concepts have merged for centuries to convey a message and drive change. “Activist Art,” as defined by the Tate Museum in London, is “a term used to describe art grounded in the
  • "Portrait of an Indigenous Womxn [Removed]” by Anna Tsouhlarakis
    Collections - Article

    Art Brings Awareness to Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women

    Navajo, Creek, and Greek artist Anna Tsouhlarakis created “Portrait of An Indigenous Womxn [Removed]” to raise awareness of MMIW and tell the stories that are not often told.
  • A woman sitting at a loom, weaving
    Collections - Article

    Weaving Stories: Spotlight on The Henry Ford's Indigenous Artist in Residence

    This year, The Henry Ford took steps toward building community with Indigenous nations by expanding the institution’s Artists in Residence program, offered annually in Greenfield Village. To kick off Celebrate Indigenous History programming, we welcomed Maggie Thompson (Fond du Lac Ojibwe) as the inaugural Indigenous Artist in Residence.
  • Map showing reservations in the United States in 1852. / THF611300
    Collections - Article

    Whose Land Are You On?

    The Paris of the Midwest. That was the phrase used to describe Detroit in the late 19th century. It was a city designed with a mission, and that mission was to impress, which it did. But the city and the land surrounding it were home to thousands of
  • A piece of digital art featuring two woman in sepia and purple hues with landscapes elements like mountains both behind and in front of them
    Collections - Article

    Indigenous Peoples’ Day

    Two posters from our collection, designed by artist Mer Young, support land stewardship and Native American voter participation in the 2020 presidential election.
  • Mammoth Hot Springs
    Collections - Article

    Indigenous People at Yellowstone: From Erasure to Inclusion

    The presence of Indigenous Americans was purposefully erased from the story of Yellowstone National Park through most of the park’s history, but this has recently begun to change.