X
c
Open Saturdays 11am–6pm | Reserve tickets now
Contact Calendar Museum Store S
Asheville Art Museum

Asheville Art Museum

North Carolina museum exhibiting 20th century American art

Explore
D

Exhibitions

Collection

Learn

Calendar

Perspective Café

Museum From Home

Museum Store

Blog

About Us

Learn more about current and upcoming exhibitions.

EXPLORE EXHIBITIONS
>
Visit
D

Plan Your Visit

Tours

Perspective Café

Facility Rental

smARTguide

About Asheville

c

Museum Hours:

Open daily 11am–6pm. Closed Mondays and Tuesdays. Pre-purchased online tickets are encouraged; walk-in tickets are also available.
m

Museum Location:

2 South Pack Square
Asheville, NC 28801
P

Museum Contact:

828.253.3227
mailbox@ashevilleart.org
Support
D

Membership

Give

Gala

Collectors’ Circle

Volunteer

Careers + Internships

Museum Members receive 12 months of free general admission.
BECOME A MEMBER
>
Become A Member!
Home > Exhibitions

Exhibitions

CurrentUpcomingPreviousTravelingDigital

Current Exhibitions

Native America

May 22–November 3, 2025
Presenting powerful photography by indigenous artists redefining identity, culture, and storytelling through a contemporary lens.

Coatlicue & Las Meninas

April 16–Ongoing
"Coatlicue & Las Meninas" is the newest addition to Pedro Lasch’s ongoing series "Black Mirror/Espejo Negro." Throughout the series, Lasch creates a dialogue among works of art from early modern Europe and pre-Columbian sculptural figures, employing the mirror as an emblem that interrogates the tension between presence and absence, colonial histories, and the politics of visibility. "Coatlicue & Las Meninas: The Stanford Edition" (2007/2025) is the first artwork commissioned for “What Can Become of Us?,” a collaboration between the Stanford Institute for Advancing Just Societies (IAJS) and Zócalo Public Square, envisioning new perspectives on migration, America’s diverse communities, and how people come together across differences.

Iron & Ink

April 2–September 27, 2025
Showcasing Collection prints from 1905 to the 1940s, Iron & Ink explores connections between industrial labor, urbanization, and the growing middle class. The exhibition highlights works by WPA artists from the 1930s whose powerful images of machinery, skyscrapers, and daily life—both at work and recreation—capture this transformational era in American society.

Flora Symbolica

March 7–July 28, 2025
"Flora Symbolica: The Art of Flowers" explores the meanings and messages of flowers in American art of the 20th and 21st centuries, highlighting the timeless connections among art, nature, and human experience.

Special Installation | Forest Feels BLOOMS

March 4–July 28, 2025
This is the second iteration of the interactive exhibit "Forest Feels" by Amanda N. Simons. Visitors are invited to make this blooming forest your own. Contribute some flowers and signs of the changing season. Let’s celebrate growth and progress. The warm months are arriving in Asheville, and the city will look much different. So, let’s celebrate that difference together.

Greetings From Asheville

December 12, 2024–May 30, 2025
This exhibition explores how the land, the people, and the built environment of Asheville and its surrounding environs were interpreted through early 20th century vintage postcards. Some images show the sophisticated architecture of the region, including views of downtown Asheville, the Biltmore Estate, and Grove Park Inn. Other images show views of the scenic mountains and landscapes that first drew tourists and outdoor enthusiasts to the region.
Four ceramic artworks staged in an exhibition hall with smaller pieces on display in the backround

Forces of Nature

July 31, 2024–Ongoing
This exhibition traces the historical, stylistic, and conceptual origins of work that either embraces or refuses the element of chance in ceramics, looking at modern and contemporary work made in Western North Carolina.

Intersections in American Art

Ongoing
One of two inaugural exhibitions is Intersections in American Art, the major reinstallation and reinterpretation of the Museum’s Collection in a much-enlarged gallery space.

Many Become One

Ongoing
Art and artists often encourage us to consider our place in the world. Artworks in the Windgate Foundation Atrium and Museum Plaza bring many separate parts together to make a unified whole and offer a variety of possibilities for how to navigate our physical world on regional, national, and global levels.

Previous Exhibitions

Special Installation | Asheville Strong

February 26–May 5, 2025
A response to the exhibition Asheville Strong: Celebrating Art and Community After Hurricane Helene, visitors are invited to add their own unique designs to a community canvas highlighting how art brings people together. The Asheville Strong community canvas was made possible by local artist Nate Barton, local non-profit Art Kit Aid, and Cheap Joe’s Art Stuff!

2025 Western North Carolina Regional Scholastic Art Awards (Digital)

February 14–May 5, 2025
The Asheville Art Museum is a regional affiliate partner of the annual Scholastic Art & Writing Awards, hosting an annual juried competition for students in grades 7–12 from all across Western North Carolina.

Asheville Strong

February 14–May 4, 2025
"Asheville Strong: Celebrating Art and Community After Hurricane Helene" is a special, non-juried exhibition which celebrates the strength and diversity of our regional arts community acknowledging the significant impact of Hurricane Helene on the lives of artists across Southern Appalachia. Our aim is to provide an opportunity and venue for impacted artists to showcase their work, connect with each other and collectors, and join together in a collective act of resilience.

American Made

November 16, 2024–February 10, 2025
American Made: Paintings and Sculpture from the DeMell Jacobsen Collection features more than 70 works of art by renowned American artists, beautifully illustrating the distinctive styles and thought-provoking art explored by American artists over the past two centuries. Though many objects from the DeMell Jacobsen Collection have been on view at other museums, this exhibition features the best of the collection brought together in one location.

Anti Form

November 2024–April 2025
The "Earth Project" series (1969), by Robert Morris, presents ten ideas for works of art shaped out of earth, atmospheric conditions, and built environments in the form of architectural plans.
The chair from Edwin Salas Acosta's The Last Chair of the Forest and the Plastic Bottle, 2024

Special Installation | The Last Chair of the Forest and the Plastic Bottle

September 13, 2024–January 20, 2025
Immerse yourself in a poignant virtual reality (VR) short film that delves into environmental consciousness and the delicate balance of nature. "The Last Chair of the Forest and the Plastic Bottle" transports viewers to the ancient Pisgah Forest, where the beauty of the last remaining tree is juxtaposed against the haunting presence of a plastic bottle.

Ginny Ruffner

September 13, 2024–January 20, 2025
This exhibition imagines an apocalyptic landscape of withered plant forms that come to life when activated with augmented reality. In collaboration with animator and media artist Grant Kirkpatrick, Ruffner illuminates the delicate balance between nature and the artificial human-built world around us, putting forth an optimistic hope for the future: that technology can be a means to understand and help save the earth from environmental devastation

Moving Stillness: Mount Rainier, 1979

September 13, 2024–January 20, 2025
Bill Viola’s "Moving Stillness: Mount Rainier, 1979" on loan from Art Bridges is an immersive experience that explores the ideas of death and regeneration in nature. In a darkened room, sounds from nature envelop the viewer, as a placid pool of water reflects a projected image of Mount Rainier onto a screen. The water is periodically disturbed, causing the image to dissolve and slowly recompose as the pool settles.

Shifting Perceptions

May 17—September 23, 2024
Shifting Perceptions features a selection of photographs from the Museum's Collection and is presented in a trio of sections, each featuring seemingly opposing forces: Natural/Unnatural, Together/Apart, and Inside/Out.
See All Previous Exhibitions

Traveling Exhibitions

50 Years of Western North Carolina Glass

This exhibition highlights the beauty of the Moores' decades of collecting foundational artists in the Studio Glass Movement.

Golden Hour

Golden Hour: Olympians Photographed by Walter Iooss Jr. highlights dozens of photographer Walter Iooss Jr.’s images from the Museum’s Collection.
A photograph featured in the exhibition.

Ralph Burns

Ralph Burns has long been recognized as a documentary photographer whose images have captured the diverse and enigmatic nature of ritual and religion, and who has explored the subjective and often defining nature of belief, worship, and culture.

Sallie Middleton: A Life in the Forest

Sallie Middleton has long been considered one of the most gifted painters of plants and animals. She possessed a remarkable eye for detail, a skilled hand to record what she saw and a keen imagination to shape her enchanted images.
See All Traveling Exhibitions

Digital Exhibitions

Beyond the Binary of Past and Future

DIGITAL EXHIBITION: The idea of the past and the future subscribes to a linear timeline that many artists actively seek to subvert in their artwork. If the binary of past and future is erased, what new parameters are opened for looking at and considering a work of art? How would that freedom allow artists and viewers to consider multiple realities? What was once futuristic can now be seen as retro and what was once old-fashioned can inspire new experimentation. When imagination is introduced into art, the idea of a multiverse becomes a possibility, where more than one experience can be real and shared. This digital exhibition considers how artists and their artwork conceive of the future and how they recontextualize representations of the past to expand the perspectives shared with audiences.

Dear Lorna, Love Ray

DIGITAL EXHIBITION: Dear Lorna, Love Ray features letters written by Ray Johnson to Lorna Blaine Halper while Johnson was a student at Black Mountain College. The letters reveal snippets of daily life at the college, Johnson’s experience of his growth as an artist, and early examples of Mail art, a movement that Johnson helped found.

Made for Market

DIGITAL EXHIBITION: Many artists, like the ones in this digital exhibition, create art with the intention for it to be sold. An artist’s experiences, identities, and class can inform where they sell their artwork. Different types of markets also play a role in an artwork’s availability. Sometimes the market is a craft fair, where the artist must apply and be accepted as a member. Perhaps the artwork was sold from a display in the artist’s front yard. A client may have commissioned the artwork directly from the artist. Artwork that is produced in large quantities at a factory can be marketed to a national audience. By learning more about the artist and the story behind their art, one gains insight into the various markets in which the artwork was sold.

Minds, Bodies, and Spirits

DIGITAL EXHIBITION: This exhibition follows select artists from their time at Black Mountain College (BMC) through their early years in the Beat scene of 1950s San Francisco.

Tensions

DIGITAL EXHIBITION: Tensions can set the groundwork for an artist’s creation—whether they reflect lived experiences or abstract ideas. Many artists address conflicts around race and gender within their own lives and for generations prior through their artwork. Sometimes the tension illustrated within an artwork deals with the object itself and focuses on the material from which it is made. In this digital exhibition, these discrepancies are used as a mechanism by which to question everything from museum standards, which were often created with a colonial mindset, to previously held beliefs in materiality. By setting up an opposition within a work, either in its context or in its makeup, the tensions in these works address something greater than themselves.

The Nature of Narrative

DIGITAL EXHIBITION: Art often tells a story. The visualization of a narrative through text or symbolic imagery separates the works grouped in this digital exhibition. Artworks with written language integrated into their composition tell a story with words. Artworks that use images of figures—humans, animals, spirits, things, and popular culture—tell a story using symbols and recognizable objects. Within these two categories, artists convey the narrative of their own lives or culture, whether from present day, history, or tales rooted in myth or legend. The art selected in this exhibition illustrates these many different story trajectories and celebrates the diversity of the artists.

Unboxing Contexts

DIGITAL EXHIBITION: Unboxing Contexts: The Unrealized Projects of Douglas D. Ellington examines unbuilt architectural projects that were designed by noted 20th century architect Douglas D. Ellington. Ellington is well known for designing several significant Art Deco structures in western North Carolina, such as the Asheville City Building and the S&W Cafeteria.  
See All Digital Exhibitions
^
Back
to top
Asheville Art Museum

Sign up for e-News!

f
t
i

Explore

  • Exhibitions
  • Collection
  • Learn
  • Calendar
  • Store
  • Blog
  • About Us

Visit

  • Plan Your Visit
  • Perspective Café
  • Virtual Visits
  • Venue Rental
  • Accessibility
  • Program & Event Tickets
  • About Asheville
  • Contact

Support

The Asheville Art Museum's vision is to transform lives through art.
  • Membership
  • Give
  • Benefit Events
  • Collectors’ Circle
  • Volunteer
  • Careers
  • Internships

Location & Hours

c

Museum Hours:

Open daily 11am–6pm. Closed Mondays and Tuesdays. Pre-purchased online tickets are encouraged; walk-in tickets are also available.
m

Museum Location:

2 South Pack Square
Asheville, NC 28801
P

Museum Contact

828.253.3227
mailbox@ashevilleart.org
© 2025 Asheville Art Museum
For Press
>
Copyright Information
>
Contact
>