DAWNLAND FESTIVAL OF ARTS AND IDEAS IS THIS WEEKEND!
BAR HARBOR—The Abbe Museum’s Dawnland Festival of Arts & Ideas returns July 12-13 on the North Lawn at COA. This annual celebration showcases Wabanaki art, music, and thought leadership, bringing together Indigenous artists, performers, and public scholars in an immersive two-day experience.
“Native arts and cultures cannot be separated from Native ways of knowing. The Dawnland Festival of Arts & Ideas continues to celebrate the Native creative economy on Wabanaki homelands while lifting up Indigenous thought leadership vital to the conversation on a healthy planet and society for us all.”
~ Betsy Richards (Cherokee), Executive Director & Senior Partner with Wabanaki Nations
Please note that seating at panels and performances is limited and is on a first come, first served basis. Registration is recommended, though not required.
2025 FESTIVAL SCHEDULE
Whether visiting Bar Harbor for a weekend getaway or looking for unique cultural festivals and events in Maine, Dawnland Festival of Arts & Ideas 2025 is a must-attend multi-day event!
SATURDAY, JULY 12, 2025
College of the Atlantic | Bar Harbor, Maine
9:00 am — Market Opens
10:00am - 10:30am — Market Performance: Hawk Henries (Nipmuc)
11:00 - 11:30 am — Market Performance: Jennifer Pictou (Mi’kmaq Nation)
Noon — Food Trucks
1:00 -1:45 pm — Featured Performance: Ty Defoe (Ojibwe + Oneida Nations)
2:30 - 3:20 pm — Panel #1: Native Arts, Cultures, & Technology
Ty Defoe (Ojibwe + Oneida Nations)
Emma Hassencahl-Perley (Wolastoqey)
Dwayne Tomah (Passamaquoddy Nation)
4:00 - 4:50 pm — Panel #2: Wabanaki Forest Futures
Tyler Everett (Mi’kmaq Nation)
Chuck Loring (Penobscot Nation)
Richard Silliboy (Mi’kmaq Nation)
5:00 pm — Festival Close
SUNDAY, JULY 13, 2025
College of the Atlantic | Bar Harbor, Maine
9:00 am — Market Opens
10:00 am to 10:30 am — Market Performance: Minquansis Sapiel (Passamaquoddy)
11:00 - 11:30 pm — Market Performance: David Sanipass (Mi’kmaq Nation)
Noon — Food Trucks
1:00 - 1:45 pm — Featured Performance: Cipelahq ehpicik - Thunderbird Women (Wabanaki)
2:30 - 3:20 pm — Panel #3: Centering Wabanaki Voices in America’s 250th
Zeke Crofton-MacDonald (Houlton Band of Maliseet)
James Francis (Penobscot Nation)
Siera Hyte (Cherokee)
4:00 - 4:50 pm — Panel #4: Indigenous Farm to Table
Cassius Spears (Narragansett)
Dawn Spears (Narragansett)
Anthony Sutton (Passamaquoddy Nation)
Jasmine Thompson-Tintor (Penobscot Nation)
5:00 pm — Festival Close
THE DAWNLAND FESTIVAL IS ORGANIZED BY THE ABBE MUSEUM
The Abbe’s mission is to illuminate and advance greater understanding of and support for Wabanaki Nations’ heritage, living cultures, and homelands. At the core of our work are decolonizing museum practices, including: collaboration with Tribal communities; privileging Native perspectives, voice, and values; a focus on dialogue; inclusion of the full measure of history; and ensuring truth-telling. This is also reflected in the Museum’s governance structure that includes a Wabanaki-majority Board and a Tribally-appointed Advisory Council, resulting in a tremendous institutional power shift. This commitment allows the museum to amplify the art, cultures, histories, and contemporary lives of Wabanaki peoples in ways that serve Tribal communities and activate audiences. Through the Wabanaki Council and community consultation, we work with Wabanaki Tribal Nations to share authority for the interpretation of their living cultures and history, privileging Native voice.
The Abbe was founded in 1928 as a small trailside museum at Sieur de Monts Spring in Lafayette National Park (today Acadia National Park) with a focus on the archaeology of the Wabanaki Nations. The Abbe soon expanded its scope to include Wabanaki material culture and now features a substantial contemporary art collection. In 2001, the Museum expanded to the downtown Bar Harbor location, creating a 17,000-square-foot museum with spacious exhibition galleries, a research lab, and state-of-the-art collections storage. Learn More | Support