ArteLatinX Exhibition (Read More)

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The mission of Arte LatinX is to create a biennial art exhibition bringing together Latinx artists based or from the Great Plains, which include: Nebraska, Iowa, Kansas, Missouri, Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota. ArteLatinX hopes to continue creating a space for the work of Latinx artists whose work is often invisible and lacks sufficient support to fully flourish. ArteLatinX addresses these challenges by developing and consolidating a new space to showcase the relevance of Latinx artists and creating a dialogue between those in and outside the arts. This exhibition will center around the motto/lema “United through Culture/Unidos a través de la Cultura.” Exhibition hours: Monday – Thursday: 2:00 – 6:00pm, Friday – Sunday: by appointment

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Flight and Hope Exhibition (Read More)

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This exhibition explores themes of flight, journey, and migration through Samuel Bak’s oeuvre. His work, informed by his experiences as a forced migrant and refugee in the aftermath of World War II, offers a potent reminder of the humanity of migrants, their dreams of freedom, their flight from oppression, their search for home, and the fraught journey they undertake in the hope for a better life. As the poet Warsan Shire notes in Home, her response to the harsh reality if life as an undocumented refugee in Europe in 2009, “No one leaves home unless home is the mouth of a shark.” The exhibition paintings depict the ordeal of upheaval but also the hope and tenacity of those fleeing violence. Flight and Hope will situate Bak’s works as part of a broader conversation about the status of refugees in 2023, the rising number of forced migrants across the globe, and the impact of changing demographics on the political discourse. Nebraska has been the new home for thousands of resettled refugees since the late 1970s, following conflicts in Vietnam, Bosnia, Iraq, Afghanistan, Sudan, and Syria. Refugees have built new homes, created communities, and businesses in our state, turning the state in a “global heartland.” Statistics and research often dehumanize the experience of forced migration. Bak’s paintings remind us that those undergoing this traumatic displacement are human; that individuals caught in conflict long for peace and a home; and that hope is, despite all odds, eternal. The Samuel Bak Museum: The Learning Center is open Wednesday, Friday and Saturday 10 A.M. - 4 P.M., Thursday 10 A.M. - 6 P.M., and Sunday Noon - 4 P.M. The museum is closed on holidays and during UNO academic breaks.

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Threads & Trails: Contemplations of Our Herstories Exhibit (Read More)

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Threads & Trails: Contemplations of Our Herstories is a collaborative exhibition created by five female-identifying artists who connect their personal histories to the conquest of the American West and Indigenous dispossession. Featuring the work of Erica Larsen-Dockray, Cybele Moon, Steph Coley, Eve-Lauryn LaFountain, and Marissa Magdalena Sykes, Threads & Trails is an installation that explores the experiences of women from the past and present in a space that is immersive, enlightening, inclusive, and transformative. The Great Plains Art Museum is open Tuesday–Saturday: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed major U.S. holidays, University breaks, and home football game Saturdays.

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Threads & Trails: Contemplations of Our Herstories Artist Panel (Read More)

In conjunction with the collaborative installation Threads & Trails: Contemplations of Our Herstories, artists Erica Larsen-Dockray, Cybele Moon, Steph Coley, Eve LaFountain, and Marissa Magdalena Sykes will discuss the historical women that inspired their work, their personal experiences as female artists, and the creative process behind the project. Exhibition Description: Threads & Trails: Contemplations of Our Herstories is a collaborative art installation created by five female-identifying artists who connect their personal histories to the conquest of the American West and Indigenous dispossession. Erica Larsen-Dockray, Cybele Moon, Stephanie Coley, Eve LaFountain (Turtle Mountain Chippewa), and Marissa Magdalena Sykes will create an immersive and performative installation informed by historical documents specific to Black, Indigenous, Latinx, or White women of the nineteenth century. A multimedia installation that combines traditional and new genre art forms, this exhibition will include projection, performance, sound, sculpture, textiles, and painting. The goals of this exhibition are to highlight the experiences of women from the past and present in a space that is immersive, enlightening, inclusive, and transformative. Visitors are invited to contemplate these experiences and support a future where gender does not limit agency.

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