Land Acknowledgment
As an itinerant institution, Black Cube Nomadic Art Museum engages with sites that possess intertwining past, present, and future histories. We acknowledge that our work in the United States and beyond takes place on the traditional territories and ancestral homelands of Indigenous peoples, to whom we are indebted in the wake of the displacement, forced assimilation, and genocide that are the legacies of settler colonialism. Specifically, we acknowledge our organization's physical presence in the Denver Metro Area, on land that is the ancestral homelands of the Cheyenne, Arapahoe, and Ute Nations and peoples. This region was also a place of trade, gathering, and healing for other Native Nations. We respect and honor the many Indigenous peoples still connected to where we gather.
To expand the life of this statement, which is neither complete nor enough on its own, Black Cube commits to donating 10% of our shop profits to organizations prioritizing Indigenous communities. In 2024, these funds will go to the Denver Indian Center, which supports the urban American Indian and Alaska Native community of the Denver Metro Area. We ask that you consider a donation of your own.