Come learn from Navajo (Dine) fiber artist, Ephraim Anderson about his art and make some of your own art to take home. This program is part of the Eiteljorg Artist-in-Residence Worskhop series, in partnership with the Eiteljorg Museum of American Indians and Western Art.
Anderson’s current work focuses on not only producing Navajo (Dine) wearable weavings but also deep diving into the techniques used in the past and how they can be incorporated into today’s work.
The longest continuously-operating branch in the IndyPL system began on the city’s east side in 1896 but moved to the village of Haughville after 1897. The branch’s many homes included the former town hall on Germania Avenue in which a fire in 1904 partially destroyed the building. After the fire, a storefront in the Michigan Plaza Shopping Center was constructed that operated until 2003, when the current 12,000-square-foot library opened on West Michigan Street.