
Empires of Liberty: Athena, America, and the Feminine Allegory of the State
This exhibition explores female personifications of the nation state from antiquity through the Enlightenment to today…
This exhibition explores female personifications of the nation state from antiquity through the Enlightenment to today…
What we know of the Etruscans comes from ancient writers, who often were rivals and adversaries, and from the archaeological record…
“The Book of Two Hemispheres” highlights the dynamic visual culture that arose in response to the most famous American anti-slavery novel of its era and arguably of all time: Uncle Tom’s Cabin by Harriet Beecher Stowe…
This exhibition spotlights the vibrancy and diversity of Asian American artistic expressions over the past century…
Jim Dine: Last Year's Forgotten Harvest, organized by the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, represents the first exhibition to focus on Dine’s portrayal of his family and friends.
This exhibition brings together work by contemporary artists who incorporate weaving, sewing, quilting, and fabric to explore ideas about gender, identity, memory, and cross-cultural encounters…
Currents: Art Since 1875 tells new stories, asks provocative questions, and challenges assumptions about the human experience through works of twentieth and twenty-first century art.
Based on the permanent collection, this exhibition of art in the Atlantic World considers empire-building across Europe, North America, and their colonies, and how it shaped interconnected global networks from the fifteenth to the nineteenth centuries…