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The Museum of New Mexico is a collection of museums, historic sites, and archaeological services governed by the State of New Mexico. [1] It currently consists of six divisions: the Palace of the Governors state history museum, the New Mexico Museum of Art, the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture, the Museum of International Folk Art, the archaeology division, and the state historic sites.
The New Mexico Department of Cultural Affairs is offering New Mexico residents who have served or serve in the military free admission to the department's 15 museums and historic sites on Friday ...
Art museums associated with colleges or universities have organized a College and University Art Museums Reciprocal Program (CUAMRP, previously called the Academic Art Museum Reciprocal Membership program). [12] [13] [14] A participating museum may receive benefits that can outweigh a potential reduction in direct admissions fees.
She created the state museums' new admission system, which charged visitors an entrance fee. [4] The new admission fees were opposed by her boss, Governor Anaya, but had been mandated by the New Mexico Legislature to pay for the upkeep of the museums. [4] Clara Apodaca also oversaw the opening of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and ...
Jun. 1—Museums in New Mexico are honoring veterans through Sept. 2. More than 20 museums across the state are Blue Star Museums, which is a partnership between the National Endowment for the ...
May 9—Visitors will follow the science in New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science's latest exhibition. "Sci-Fi & Sci-Fact" is a traveling exhibit from New Mexico Museum of Space History ...
Log Cabin Museum, Las Cruces, moved to Chloride, New Mexico in 2006 and now called the Grafton Cabin; currently unused. [21] [22]Million Dollar Museum, White's City, New Mexico, near Carlsbad Caverns, contents auctioned off in 2008, [23] contained oddities and curios [24] [25]
The new US$44 million museum opened to the public on May 24, 2009, holdings around 20,000 artifacts, [4] and receiving more than 10,000 visitors on its first day. [5] The New Mexico History Museum. [6] has 3½ floors of exhibitions telling the stories that made the American West, from the early lives of Native people to Spanish colonists.