Current and upcoming exhibitions
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Asheville, N.C.—The Asheville Art Museum is proud to bring world-class exhibitions to the Western North Carolina community and visitors. Additional summer and fall exhibitions will be announced soon. Click here to view all exhibitions via ashevilleart.org.
CURRENT EXHIBITIONS
Closing soon—on view through August 2, 2021
Our Strength Is Our People: The Humanist Photographs of Lewis Hine
Old World/New Soil: Foreign-Born American Artists from the Asheville Art Museum Collection
Opening soon—July 28, 2021 through January 17, 2022
Walter B. Stephen Pottery: Cameo to Crystalline
Now through August 30, 2021
Public Domain: Photography and the Preservation of Public Lands
Question Bridge: Black Males
Now through September 13, 2021
Huffman Gifts of Contemporary Southern Folk Art
Now through October 4, 2021
Golden Hour: Olympians Photographed by Walter Iooss Jr.
Artistic Tribute: Representation of the Athlete
Precious Medals: Gold, Silver, Bronze
Ongoing in 2021
Intersections in American Art
Many Become One
UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS IN 2021
More to be announced soon.
August 20 through November 1, 2021
Rural Avant-Garde: The Mountain Lake Experience
October 22, 2021 through January 24, 2022
Modernist Design at Black Mountain College
November 19, 2021 through March 14, 2022
A Living Language: Cherokee Syllabary and Contemporary Art
*On view at the Museum of the Cherokee Indian in Cherokee, NC from June 12, 2021 to October 31, 2021.
Our Strength Is Our People is organized by art2art Circulating Exhibitions, LLC. All works are from the private collection of Michael Mattis & Judith Hochberg. This exhibition is generously supported by the Workers’ Legacy Foundation.
Rural Avant-Garde: The Mountain Lake Experience was organized by the Longwood Center for the Visual Arts at Longwood University. Generous funding was provided in part by the National Endowment for the Arts.
Support for Modernist Design of Black Mountain College provided by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation.
A Living Language: Cherokee Syllabary and Contemporary Art is made possible in part by a grant from the Blue Ridge National Heritage Area Partnership, and sponsored in part by the Cherokee Preservation Foundation and Kevin Click & April Liou in memory of Myron E. Click.
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