Attention: Tonight’s program Humor and the Humanities with Shelly C. Lowe and Patricia N. Limerick is being rescheduled. Please contact us with any questions: (505) 954-7213.
No other force in anthropology today has as much impact in moving the field forward.
My time here has been transformative. Not only has the book developed well beyond what I initially planned, but I have reformulated my own interests.
SAR is absolutely the place of choice for any great anthropological or archaeological scholar who is doing independent work and wants to have a sabbatical where they can really do the work that matters to them.
No other force in anthropology today has as much impact in moving the field forward.
–R. Brian Ferguson, Advanced Seminar Organizer
List of events in Photo View
National Museum Leaders Share Indigenous Collections Care Knowledge
Dec 17, 2025
Registration now open for 2026 virtual speaker series, curated by the School for Advanced Research and the Gilcrease Museum.
The Dawn of Everything Receives 2025 J. I. Staley Prize for Anthropological Excellence
Nov 21, 2025
The School for Advanced Research announces The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity by David Graeber and David Wengrow as the 2025 J. I. Staley Prize recipient, recognizing its groundbreaking anthropological insights that redefine human history, freedom, and social possibility.
APPLY NOW: SAR-Getty Institute for Art History
Oct 17, 2025
SAR’s Indian Arts Research Center and Scholar Programs as well as the Getty Foundation are excited to announce a new seminar program that will invite scholars to reimagine art history through equity, reciprocity, and community engagement.
Scholar Programs
Indian Arts Research Center
The Indian Arts Research Center (IARC) is home to a collection of over 12,000 works of Native art. IARC brings creativity and scholarship together through fellowships, community initiatives, and groundbreaking collections care approaches focused on collaboration with Native communities. Explore how the IARC honors cultural heritage, empowers Native artists to further their practices, and guides today’s museum professionals.
Online Collection
Catherine McElvain Library
SAR Press
Founded in 1908 and formally a book publisher since 1979, SAR Press has produced thought-provoking books on a wide range of academic and popular subjects. With a legacy of influential titles particularly in anthropology and archaeology, SAR Press brings bold ideas to scholars and readers around the world.