Archambault has devoted her life to teaching, researching, and administering programs relating to North American studies. She has taught classes in Native American studies at numerous colleges and universities including: Pine Ridge Tribal College (Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota); University of California, Berkeley; the University of New Mexico; and Johns Hopkins University.[5] Her research interests focus on several urban and reservation communities in specific areas including reservation land use, health evaluation, expressive art, material culture, contemporary native culture, and the sun dance ceremony of eight different Plains groups.[1]
Archambault worked as a Professor at the University of Wisconsin in the Department of Anthropology (1983–86). She also worked as the Director of Ethnic studies at the California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland, California (1978–83).[citation needed]
Now retired, she worked for the Smithsonian Institution as the Director of the American Indian program of the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, DC.[1] Archambault began working there in 1986. Some of her responsibilities at the museum included preserving and promoting Native American art, culture, and political anthropology. She also acted as an ethnic liaison, supervised Native American fellowship interns, and managed a $110,000 annual program budget.[citation needed]
University of California Joint Academic Senate-Administration Committee on Human Skeletal Remains
American Association of Anthropology
National Anthropologists Association
Exhibits
Archambault was responsible for the redesign of the North American Indian Ethnology Halls for the “Changing Culture in a Changing World” exhibit. She has also curated four major exhibits: “Plains Indian Arts: Change and Continuity” (1987), “100 Years of Plains Indian Painting” (1989), “Indian Basketry and Their Makers” (1990), and “Seminole!” (1990). She also contributed to the Los Angeles Southwest Museum's quincentennial exhibit “Grand-father, Heart our voices” in 1992.[1]
Works
Traditional Arts (1980)
Dur Samedi pour Lili (2000)
Waiting for Winston Elkhart (2013)
References
^ abcdefWayne, Tiffany K. American Women of Science since 1900. Ed. Martha J. Bailey. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2011. Print.