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Every Friday throughout the summer, from 8am-11am
Where: 2080 San Ysidro Crossing, O’ga P’ogeh Owingeh, NM 87507

Intersectional Fridays invites our non-Indigenous community to the farm to connect with the land they inhabit in reciprocal & meaningful ways while creating a community of like minded folks who care about the future & want to learn new ways of being better land stewards & community advocates. It all starts with knowing the land you occupy! From there, comes understanding what is at stake for Indigenous people who are still actively here, doing their darnedest to maintain the integrity of our lifeways in spite of ongoing attacks on our lands and bodies. With this intent at the forefront, we invite our larger O’ga P’ogeh community to our sacred space at Full Circle Farm to work the land & engage in dialogues about what it means to be a good relative, land steward and advocate for the most vulnerable. We have a great group of folks ready to guide you through this important work so come on down, get dirty, get real and get ready to have your paradigm blown bc thats what this time is calling for. The farm is the new frontlines babes & building beloved community is what’s gonna carry us into the unknown future! Join us! Dress for work, wear a hat and bring h20! Snacks provided!

Food will be provided!

Community Day at Full Circle Farm!

Every Wednesday morning from 8am-11am – Starting Wednesday June 18!

What: Every week we will have various activities tending to the garden, from plant care and identification to harvesting and weeding! We welcome folks to come and go as they please as we enjoy our morning together!
Where: 2080 San Ysidro Crossing, O’ga P’ogeh Owingeh, NM 87507
Who: Centering our Indigenous, Nuevo Mexicane, Immigrant, and BIPOC community members

Please bring water and a hat – snacks will be provided!

Community Farm Blessing & Planting Days!

When: Saturday, May 3rd AND Sunday May 18th at 9am
Where: 2080 San Ysidro Crossing, O’ga P’ogeh (Santa Fe), NM 87507

Farm Blessing and Planting starting at 9am

Community Feed starting at Noon

Beginners Beading Class

When: Friday, February 28th at 6pm-8pm
Where: 2080 Calle de Comercio Unit A
, O’ga P’ogeh Owingeh, NM 87507

Follow the registration link below!

*This is an Indigenous centered space! Ages 13+

Invest in community led power building

Past Events

FROM

O’GA P’OGEH

To PALESTINE

We invite the local BIPoC community to join us in a collective love offering to Palestine through art and performance at Alas de Agua on Friday February 23, 5-8pm

Graphic Art by Autumn D. Gomez (Taos/Comanche) @pimikwusii

WEBINAR: Featuring Indigenous educators Dr. Jennifer Denetdale (Diné) and Dr Porter Swentzell (Santa Clara Pueblo).

March 23, 2021

WEBINAR: Keep Santa Fe Multicultural is a group of community members, including 3SC, who are working to keep the Multicultural mural in place at the Railyard. This mural, which is one of the few remaining public art pieces in the downtown area, is slated to be destroyed during the construction of the Vladem Contemporary Art Museum.

We have been in contact with the state regarding this project, as well as collecting community feedback regarding the mural, and public art in general. This is part of a larger problem in Santa Fe of gentrification and displacement. Please join us to get informed on the current status of this project and find out how you can get involved.

August 11, 2020



WEBINAR with Heidi Brandow: “The Memory Project” utilized demographic data as a means to critically analyze public art and memorials throughout Santa Fe, New Mexico. Data collected highlighted the disproportionately high colonial influence represented in public memorials which significantly diminished the history and people of regionally specific Indigenous cultures.

Heidi K. Brandow is a multi-disciplinary artist whose work is commonly filled with whimsical characters and monsters that are often combined with words of poetry, stories, and personal reflections. Hailing from a long line of Native Hawaiian singers, musicians, and performers on her mother’s side and Diné storytellers and medicine people on her father’s side, she has found that her pursuit of a career in the arts was a natural progression.

Primarily working in painting, printmaking, and social-engagement mediums, Brandow’s work is centered on the inclusion of Indigenous people and perspectives, in the development of ethical and sustainable methods of creative engagement.

July 14, 2020