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California State University, Chico

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The Museum of Anthropology is not only a place of learning and engagement for our visitors, it is also a laboratory for our college students! Every year students research, design and install our museum exhibitions, learning valuable curatorial skills along the way! Come see and enjoy their professional work.

Current Exhibits and Events

What’s Your Mood?

A multicolored text asking the reader what their mood is.

This is the question students in the Anthropology Museum Exhibition Research Design and installation course asked themselves.  Once again, the results are nothing short of amazing. Through hands-on media and technology as well as art and dioramas, we invite you to discover how our actions in the world, our culture, our bodies, and with each other all influence how we feel. 

We think about and experience moods every day.  Moods help us understand ourselves, but they are hard to put into words.  Join us as we explore the world of MOOD and try to answer these questions?

What is mood?

Do other people share my mood?

Can I change my mood?

Together we will work to understand what moods are.

About.Me - A Visual Ethnographic Project on Generation Z’s Fashion Identity

Colorful poster titled "About Me" with three expressive people in the center

Step into the artist's field of vision to feel and see the fashion culture of Generation Z up close. Growing up in a world shaped by the internet, social media, and e-commerce, Gen Z is reshaping the way we think about style, fashion consumption, and self-expression. With a passion for storytelling and an eye for detail, the student artist/photographer, Alenuce (Alen) Pinto, continues to push the boundaries of photography as a tool for both art and the exploration of timely social issues. The show opens March 1, 2025 as part of the Explore Butte County Museum Weekend. Adding to the celebratory mood of the new show, a DJ will be playing from 12-3 on Saturday. The show will be up through the summer.

Art, People’s History, and Social Change in Latin America Exhibit

Celebrate People's History in Latin America Poster

If you knew more about how social movements have triumphed in the past, would it shift how you imagine the future?
Would it shape how you see your own role in the world, or the power of collective memory?

Join Dr. Hannah Burdette’s Latin American Studies capstone course for an exhibition titled “Art, People’s History, and Social Change in Latin America.” The students of LAST 495W used Just Seeds Artist Cooperative’s Celebrate People’s History Posters as a framework for engaging in public history research through art. The result is an exhibition of original posters on topics ranging from student protests and environmental activism to reproductive justice and labor rights. 

Want to learn more? Check out our podcast channel!

Valene L. Smith Museum of Anthropology Events

Events through April 16, 2026
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Unfolded: Seasons and Symbols of the Kimono

Visit the Valene L. Smith Museum of Anthropology and enter the world of kimonos. 

Kimono exhibit poster

Bound in Japanese tradition, the kimono, which means “the thing to wear,” is not just clothing. It represents who you are. Each kimono, crafted from a single bolt of fabric, provides clues about its wearer, communicating status, gender, virtue, and a connection to the natural world. The symmetrical robe is wrapped tightly around the body confining mobility while displaying refinement and elegance through intricately designed motifs and patterns.

In the student-curated exhibition, Unfolded: Seasons and Symbols of the Kimono, selected kimonos from the Masami Toku collection, inherited from her mother Taeko Toku (1932 – 2020), are presented in thematic scenes weaving together history, art, symbolism, and identity. Cherry blossoms, chrysanthemums, maple leaves, and bamboo are symbolic of the seasonal changes of life. Haikus coupled with these motifs and patterns immerse visitors in the simplicity and elegance of the natural world seen through the kimono. The continuity and change of the kimono over time provides a new perspective to understand how these garments communicate identity, belonging, and tradition.

Masami Toku, a professor of Art Education at Chico State, has continued the tradition of wearing kimono as a first -class certified master of the kimono. Visitors will follow the progression of Masami’s life through an odyssey of personal experiences embodied in her own kimonos, from childhood to adulthood. Each section of the exhibition suggests a different layer through which we may approach and understand the kimono. Walk through the show and see the world of kimono unfold.


Deeply Rooted: How soil connects us

Deeply Rooted: How Soil Connects Us

Chico, CA—What connects us to each other, to nature, to life itself? The hidden world under our feet: soil. The Valene L. Smith Museum of Anthropology at Chico State is offering a new student-curated exhibition, Deeply Rooted: How Soil Connects Us, to open on January 26th, 2023. Under the instruction of museum director, Dr. William Nitzky, and in partnership with soil scientist, Dr. Garrett Liles, Exhibition Design students present the incredible universe of soil and the vital role it plays across global ecosystems and cultures. The exhibition brings together aspects of science and cultural history with special attention given to regenerative agriculture as a path to support soil and human health. Visitors come away with deeper appreciation and insight into our relationship with soil.

Deeply Rooted: How Soil Connects Us offers the North State an immersive, interactive, and educational experience that illustrates how soils connect diverse aspects of the natural world and human experience. Visitors will marvel at the subterranean tunnel that welcomes them into the secret world below us. They will learn how soil has been a vital resource for not only food production, but also a medium for art, home construction, medicine, and cultural identity. The exhibit also recognizes the Mechoopda upon whose homeland Chico State resides. The tribe’s enduring presence continues and is on display in this exhibition with stories and art by current tribal members. Central to the exhibition is also a soil horizon interactive table of Butte County and Lassen Park, offering insight into the ways rainfall and volcanic activity have shaped our region. Sustainability is the lens through which most of the exhibit displays approach the topic of soil. Highlighting how sand and soil are threatened, the exhibit explores alternatives for a more sustainable future for the planet.

Since its inception in 1970, the Valene L. Smith Museum of Anthropology has served as a multifaceted educational facility. The Museum is deeply committed to outreach programming involving community collaboration and civic engagement. The museum’s diversity of outreach programs, include: K-12 school tours, the World Explorations lectures series, cultural and community events. To reserve a school tour or find out more about the calendar of programs this spring please contact the museum.


 Why Delta Sigma Theta?

Delta Sigma Theta Sorority

In conjunction with Chico State’s Alumni / Family Weekend, the Valene Smith Museum of Anthropology will launch its first pop-up style exhibition in its newly renovated lobby gallery space.  The inaugural pop-up tells the story of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority’s historic return to campus. 

The museum is honored to tell this story and spread the word of one of the vital campus organizations dedicated to enhancing Black student life.


Fire and Water, Elements of Change

Fire and Water: Elements of Change

Students in the Museum Studies Program at Chico State have mounted an exhibition that examines the planetary consequences brought on by the climate crises around the world and close to home. Fire and Water: Elements of Change confronts the extreme disasters of wildfires, rising seas, epic storms and devastating droughts that dominate our news cycle. These events are not just in remote or far off places; rather they have impacted our local communities in ways that have permanently changed our geography and identity. This is personal.

This exhibit observes our changing planet, from an anthropological perspective, through two major elements: fire and water. Ancient and contemporary societies around the world identify four basic elements— fire, water, air, and earth—as a way to understand phenomena in nature. On the surface fire and water appear as opposite forces, but science and traditional ecological knowledge provide frameworks to see the interconnected relationship between these elements.

Both fire and water are life-giving, but can also be forces of destruction and change. Our county has seen and felt these forces first-hand in two crises in two years. On a soggy day in February of 2017, the Oroville Dam’s main and subsidiary spillways could no longer handle the excessive pressure resulting from heavy rains. The threat of the dam bursting prompted the evacuation of more than 180,000 people living in the path of the dam. On a hotter and drier than usual day in November 2018, a spark lit a tree in Pulga and burned through homes and businesses, leaving people homeless overnight. Over the course of the next weeks, the unthinkable became reality. The town of Paradise and other foothill communities had been destroyed by the Camp Fire. Both incidents have taught us that everything must be re-evaluated. Knowledge on all these issues will help visitors be better informed to make tough decisions moving forward.

The exhibition sensitively portrays and discusses these issues and tragic events in a respectful manner. Open spaces, gentle music, videos, and artwork offer a safe space and buffers to explore potentially difficult topics for the community. Global incidents of similar ecological disasters coupled with scientific research connect our local stories with wider dialogues about climate change, water insecurity, plastic waste, and California water issues. Situating local stories with global perspectives offer ideas on actions to take. The exhibit will also feature an interactive Virtual Reality for visitors to experience the Myth of Prometheus in 3-D. The exhibit also features two installations by local artist, Eve Werner.

Humans can be remarkably resilient. In the exhibit, art and the elements converge. Like our ancestors, we see beauty and mystery in nature. From the floods and ashes, we rise with new purpose and creative thoughts to solve and confront climate challenges. We invite the public to explore the exhibit with a sense of inspiration. The exhibit will remind viewers of the incredible beauty and wonder nature provides. At the same time, visitors will be challenged to connect and engage with the consequences and possibilities the twin forces of fire and water have brought to everyone’s doorstep.

As with all the museum exhibitions, free tours for K-12 and college classes are available. Spring 2020 the Valene Smith Museum of Anthropology will partner with the Turner Museum and Meriam Library to offer a new 3-hour Friday morning program. The three campus entities will provide hands-on STEAM activities to enhance awareness on climate ecological literacy, primary document research and the arts.


Unbroken Traditions Poster

Unbroken Traditions

“When you weave a design into a basket, you put the spirit of what you are weaving right into the basket” – Lilly Baker, Mountain Maidu Basketweaver, 1911-2006

New Exhibition Features Baskets from Four Generations of Mountain Maidu Weavers of the Meadows-Baker Family

The Valene L. Smith Museum of Anthropology will hold a grand opening reception for the exhibition, Unbroken Traditions: Basketweavers of the Meadows-Baker Family of Northern California, on Wednesday, September 18th from 5:30-7:00 p.m.  Special guest speakers begin at 6:00 p.m. The exhibition represents the culmination of one year of research and collaboration between Mountain Maidu weavers, other tribal experts, museums studies students, faculty and curators.

The Meadows-Baker family consists of four generations of Mountain Maidu basketweavers who continued the tradition of basketry by sharing their talents. The exhibit shows only a glimpse into the lives of the Meadows-Baker family, but their impact on the cultural and artistic Maidu traditions is monumental.

Visitors will be able to explore the world of basketry and learn about the techniques and materials used to create these practical and ceremonial works of art. The displays feature many uses for baskets such as storage, winnowing, cooking, fishing, acorn processing, and carrying infants.

The exhibition title, Unbroken Tradition, seeks to remind the public of the long unbroken lineage of people who have emerged from repeated attempts to eradicate their culture with their deeply-rooted heritage and traditions intact. 

Weavers and the landscape live and work in harmony.   The exhibit exposes visitors to the importance of this vital and important reciprocal relationship between the two. Traditional Ecological Knowledge in this context teaches a weaver to learn the proper way to gather weaving materials from the landscape before being allowed to make a basket. The knowledge of the environment, plant lifecycles, and their unique characteristics was passed down through the maternal lineages of the Meadows-Baker family in this way.

As museums across the nation begin to recognize the injustices of the past against Native American groups and as Chico State publically recognizes the land on which it sits as having been the original land of the Mechoopda Tribe, the museum has worked in partnership with the campus Tribal Liaison, Rachel McBride-Praetorius and local consultants to lift up the voices and experiences of Indigenous California Peoples.  The basket, in fact, is the perfect symbol of the resilience of a people who survived and now thrive, even when political forces and colonial attitudes tried to eliminate these century’s old ways of life and art forms. We invite you to celebrate the natural beauty and artistry of Maidu basketweavers.  These baskets represent a deep and complex understanding and interdependent relationship with the environment as well as remarkable skill and artistry unsurpassed by any other artistic tradition.