Unpredictable Nature
S. Wilson and Grace M. Pollock Education Center GalleryArtists Sandi Neiman Lovitz and Autumn C. Wright utilize gesture, shape, pattern, and spontaneity to create the abstract compositions featured in Unpredictable Nature.
Artists Sandi Neiman Lovitz and Autumn C. Wright utilize gesture, shape, pattern, and spontaneity to create the abstract compositions featured in Unpredictable Nature.
Tradition Interrupted explores how artists weave contemporary ideas with traditional art and craft to create thought-provoking hybrid images and objects that have caught the world’s attention.
In printmaking series, artists in the Renaissance and Baroque era often depicted stories of the seasons, elements, planets, virtues, and vices. Four Seasons and Seven Vices introduces this approach to printmaking, highlighting why it found favor during this time.
Someday This Pain Will Be Useful To You features visual artist Irvin Rodriguez in an exhibition that brings together a variety of work from the last five years.
Project: Nature offers a sneak peek of the current VanGo! Museum on Wheels exhibition Nature in Art, which features the work of Victoria Fuller.
In Nature’s Studio showcases the bounty of American artists' depictions of the landscape from the early nineteenth century through the late twentieth century.
The DeSoto Family Vault Gallery provides context to the themes of containment and comfort found in Ron Lambert’s sculptural installation Approximate Release.
The Late Work features a selection of work completed in O’Beil’s 70s to mid-80s. These pieces show a mature development of the gestural abstraction she embraced in the 1960s.
Mythologies of Motherhood chronicles personal stories of artists currently raising children. The artwork included draws attention to the disparities between the "ideals" of motherhood and the realities of actual family dynamics.
Artist Diana Jensen took inspiration from an anonymous assortment of vernacular photos for the paintings found in World Traveler / Shelter at Home.
Making Your Mark brings together a rich array of 52 works on paper, breaking down the various methods and materials used in modern artistic practice.
What does a better future look like to you as an artist? Susquehanna Art Museum is challenging artists to render their vision of a promising future for its exhibition Future Places.
Lou Schellenberg invites viewers to respond to patterns of habitat and change in small towns, suburbs, and rural communities and the human story behind every dwelling and built boundary.
These narrative quilted swing coats by artist Patricia A. Montgomery celebrate under-recognized women who made major contributions to the Civil Rights Movement.
If life as we know it were to come to a sudden stop, what would archeologists find decades from now? "Future Fossils" presents a possible view into that frozen moment in time and culture.
The quilts presented in this exhibition are graphically striking examples that embody a sense of “wall power.”
Lou Schellenberg invites viewers to respond to patterns of habitat and change in small towns, suburbs, and rural communities and the human story behind every dwelling and built boundary.
These narrative quilted swing coats by artist Patricia A. Montgomery celebrate under-recognized women who made major contributions to the Civil Rights Movement.
If life as we know it were to come to a sudden stop, what would archeologists find decades from now? "Future Fossils" presents a possible view into that frozen moment in time and culture.
The quilts presented in this exhibition are graphically striking examples that embody a sense of “wall power.”
Lou Schellenberg invites viewers to respond to patterns of habitat and change in small towns, suburbs, and rural communities and the human story behind every dwelling and built boundary.
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