Margins and the Height of the Sun is comprised of a body of work Elaine Elledge created as she worked to find balance between her life as an artist and full-time parent, while also seeking a diagnosis for an unknown medical condition. Using everyday items such as cheesecloth, gauze, paper, and fabric, her work explores the depth and complexity of motherhood, the frailty of the human body, and what it means to cultivate through care and relinquish control.
Photographer Mark Perrott has spent the past several decades documenting the ever-expanding group of tattooed Americans. Perrott turns his camera to the diminishing population of highly decorated and graying Americans in his current series, ANCIENT INK.
Queremos Justicia uses art to tell the story of how the Shut Down Berks Coalition organized to close an immigrant prison. This multimedia exhibit explores the art made for the campaign and how it played an invaluable role in education, mobilization, and community building.
Distinguished Grace: The Paintings of Dean Stambaugh celebrates and showcases the work created by Dean Stambaugh throughout his career and lifetime. His paintings draw influence from fellow Regionalist and Appalachian artists, displaying a reverence for rural life, peaceful isolation, and vast expanses of nature.
Pre-K Paper Play with Elaine Elledge For pre-schoolers and their families! Join us for an early-childhood program for families with children ages 3-5 (though siblings are welcome too!). This event includes museum admission and a simple make and take activity. Elaine Elledge, exhibiting artist in the Lobby Gallery, will lead children in creating their own […]
Susquehanna Art Museum is pleased to present If Herr Street Could Talk, the homecoming exhibition of award-winning abstract artist and Harrisburg native, Alteronce Gumby. Featuring twenty-five works, this exhibition celebrates Gumby's investigation of color and material...
This anniversary exhibition celebrates 10 years of Susquehanna Art Museum in the historic midtown neighborhood of Harrisburg.
The Dōshi Gallery Juried Exhibition, NIGHTFALL, asked artists to delve into the concept of oncoming night, whether metaphorically or through medium and technique.