The forest

Kaitlin Bryson Selected for 2026 Cohort for Monument Lab Re:Generation!

Congratulations to Kaitlin Bryson for being selected to take part in the 2026 cohort for Monument Lab Re:Generation! She received a $100,000 grant for her ongoing project, Bellow Forth. Bellow Forth is a community project focused on restoring soil health and environmental resiliency through storytelling and collaboration, community and ecosystem science, and social art practice in wildfire-impacted lands and communities in northern New Mexico.
January 21, 2026

Congratulations to Kaitlin Bryson for being selected to take part in the 2026 cohort for Monument Lab Re:Generation! She received a $100,000 grant for her ongoing project, Bellow Forth. Bellow Forth is a community project focused on restoring soil health and environmental resiliency through storytelling and collaboration, community and ecosystem science, and social art practice in wildfire-impacted lands and communities in northern New Mexico. Monument Lab is funded and supported by the Mellon Foundation, whose mission is the following: “Monument Lab is a nonprofit public art, history, and design studio based in Philadelphia. We are dedicated to advancing justice by reimagining monuments as places for belonging, learning, and healing. We believe that our unreconciled past and our inherited monument landscape continue to reinforce systems of injustice, haunt our present, and impact our individual and collective futures. We center artists and local changemakers to collectively transform how monuments are created, interpreted, and experienced. We cultivate conversations about the past, present, and future of monuments as a means to animate democracy and foster generational change. In 2022, Monument Lab started a sub-project, Re:Generations, to support artists working to build, inspire, and envision “new” monuments. They selected 10 teams and projects from across the U.S. for each cohort. 2026 is the final year of the Re:Generation.

Kaitlin Bryson is a queer, ecological/bio artist concerned with environmental and social justice. She primarily works with fungi, plants, microbes, and biodegradable materials to engage more than-human audiences, while also facilitating human communities through social practice and environmental stewardship. Bryson received an MFA in Art & Ecology from the University of New Mexico in 2018 and has worked on multiple community-engaged land and bioremediation projects in the Southwest bioregion with Tewa Women United and Communities for Clean Water. She is a recipient of the 2022 Anonymous Was A Woman Environmental Arts Grant, as well as the 2022 Future Art Award: Ecosystem X from Mozaik Philanthropy, and a 2022 Fulcrum Fund from 516 Arts. Bryson has exhibited throughout the United States and Europe, and in Mexico, Ireland, and Nepal, as well as in notable festivals such as Ars Electronica (AT) and Politics of the Machine (DE). Her artwork and activism have been featured in books such as “In Search of Mycotopia: Citizen Science, Fungi Fanatics, and the Untapped Potential of Mushrooms”, by Doug Bierend, and The New Farmer’s Almanac “The Grand Land Plan”, and in the Autumn 2022 Edition of Antennae: The Journal of Nature in Visual Culture. Her titles include artist, educator, community mycologist, Lecturer III of Art & Ecology, Co-Director and field coordinator of RAVEL (Radicle Art V Ecology Lab), and a member and organizer with Communities for Clear Waters.

Here at the department, we are so grateful for both her work and engagement with students as she shares her passions and works towards a more sustainable way to practice art.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
EXPLORE the work of Kaitlin Bryson on her website https://www.kaitlinbryson.com/
LEARN MORE at https://www.bellowforth.com/
https://monumentlab.com/about
https://monumentlab.com/projects/regeneration-2024

Bad Bunny x UNM Alum Eric-Paul Riege

Bad Bunny x UNM Alum Eric-Paul Riege

As Bad Bunny’s cultural influence continues to expand, we revisit his 2019 collaboration with Eric-Paul Riege during the artist’s first solo museum exhibition at ICA Miami. Grounded in Diné weaving traditions and the philosophy of hózhó - beauty, balance, and goodness - Riege’s regalia for epr embodies ancestral knowledge, performance, and the meaning of hó𝘭ǫ́: to exist.

Ray Hernandez

Art History Professor, Ray Hernández-Durán, Named Regents’ Professor

Ray Hernández-Durán, professor of art history in UNM’s Department of Art & Art History in the College of Fine Arts, has been named a Regents’ Professor, a distinguished and lifelong honor recognizing senior faculty members who demonstrate excellence in teaching, research, and community impact. The title is awarded following a rigorous review process led by the College Dean in collaboration with the Provost’s Office and includes a three-year stipend to support the recipient’s work.