Tatiana Lomahaftewa-Singer (Choctaw/Hopi) is the Curator of Collections at the IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (MoCNA) in Santa Fe, NM. She is an enrolled member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and Hopi and holds a BFA in Fine Arts Administration from the University of Arizona, Tucson. Lomahaftewa-Singer has more than thirty years of experience with contemporary Native American Art and has curated or project-managed exhibitions at MoCNA, including The Stories We Carry; Experimental Expression: Printmaking at IAIA, 1963-1980; Action/Abstraction Redefined: Native American Art, 1940s to 1970s; iCon: A Tribute to Allan Houser; Lloyd Kiva New: Art, Design & Influence; 50/50: Fifty Artists, Fifty Years; Drawing from the Collection; Voices from the Mound: Contemporary Choctaw; Valjean McCarty Hessing Honored; and Lifting the Veil: New Mexico Women and the Tri-cultural Myth. She has authored catalogue essays in Action/Abstraction Redefined: Native American Art, 1940s to 1970s (2018), 50/50: Fifty Artists, Fifty Years (2012), and Lifting the Veil: New Mexico Women and the Tri-cultural Myth (2007). She currently sits on the New Mexico Capital Arts Foundation Board and the Terra Foundation Indigenous Advisory Council, and she has juried numerous art programs including the Forge Project Fellowships, Southwestern Association for Indian Arts Fellowships, and the Santa Fe Art Institute Visual Arts Review Committee.
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