Mountain Time Arts

Mountain Time Arts Producing bold, engaging public art projects that explore the history, culture and environment of the Rocky Mountain West. Bringing communities together.

WHAT WE CARE ABOUT

The production of powerful public art. Collaboration.

TOMORROW join us at  for a community feed and a screening of 3 Indigenous short films. Register online.📆Sunday, Oct 20th...
10/19/2024

TOMORROW join us at for a community feed and a screening of 3 Indigenous short films. Register online.

📆Sunday, Oct 20th 6-9pm

‼️RESCHEDULED‼️Voices of the Land is being rescheduled to THIS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20TH due to snow and the seasonal nature ...
10/17/2024

‼️RESCHEDULED‼️

Voices of the Land is being rescheduled to THIS SUNDAY, OCTOBER 20TH due to snow and the seasonal nature of Tinworks’ current buildings. We hope you’ll join us on Sunday for this event.

Mountain Time Arts in collaboration with Tinworks Art presents an evening of Indigenous storytelling through three short films: How The Land Remembers Us, Tiny, and Learning I’m Home. Through diverse mediums, these short documentary films listen to the voices of land, family, and community.

This event is the premiere community screening in Bozeman for How The Land Remembers Us. A film that shares the story of Mountain Time Art’s “Yellowstone Revealed” project in Yellowstone National Park. It is accompanied by two award-winning short documentary films that have been screened at film festivals across Turtle Island (USA & Canada) and the world.
This evening celebrates Indigenous filmmaking & art while aiming to evoke important dialogue about storytelling sovereignty.

Join us at 6 pm for a community feed and gathering.
Screenings begin at 7 pm with a total runtime of 54 minutes.

This event is free and open to the public.

MONTANA - Indigenous Peoples Day is a holiday on the second Monday in October that celebrates and honors Montana’s rich ...
10/12/2024

MONTANA - Indigenous Peoples Day is a holiday on the second Monday in October that celebrates and honors Montana’s rich history and culture, and the contributions of Montanans, who are all Indigenous to their own ancestral lands, to our state and communities. This year’s Indigenous Peoples Day falls on Monday, October 14, and will be marked by local celebrations across Montana from Glendive to Billings to Missoula. “This is a day to celebrate all people,” said Marsha Small, co-founder of Indigenous Peoples Day Montana. Indigenous Peoples Day Montana is a grassroots group that formed in 2015 around the goal of establishing Indigenous Peoples Day as a holiday in Bozeman, Montana. The group succeeded in that effort in 2016, and has since led the charge to pass a bill establishing Indigenous Peoples Day as a statewide holiday in five consecutive sessions of the Montana Legislature. “Everyone is Indigenous to somewhere, and all Montanans play a role in stewarding this place. We see this holiday as an opportunity to recognize that we are all here to care for these lands, and that our relationships and care for the land unite us.”

In Bozeman, Indigenous Peoples Day Montana and the Extreme History Project are organizing an event from 5:00 to 7:00 PM at Peet’s Hill.

Address

544 E Main Street, Unit B
Bozeman, MT
59715

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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