Say It with Food
Watson Fine Arts - Experimental Theatre Norton, United StatesAn interactive installation composed and performed by Artist-in-Residence Rosemary Liss 11' and First Year Seminar Rituals of Dinner students.
An interactive installation composed and performed by Artist-in-Residence Rosemary Liss 11' and First Year Seminar Rituals of Dinner students.
Silkscreen printer Helen Popinchalk re-creates selections from the series Los Caprichos by Francisco Goya in eye-popping neon color exhibited under black light.
Artists Raúl Gonzalez, Edward Monovich and Karen Moss respond to society’s many ills, including global conflict, economic inequities and ecological disasters, with an eye toward raising consciousness and creating social change.
Join Julia Courtney, independent curator and editor of The Legal Guide for Museum Professionals, and Leah Niederstadt, assistant professor of museum studies and curator of Wheaton’s Permanent Collection, for an engaging discussion of the challenges museum professionals face when deaccessioning objects from their collections.
Silkscreen printer Helen Popinchalk re-creates selections from the series Los Caprichos by Francisco Goya in eye-popping neon color exhibited under black light.
Artists Raúl Gonzalez, Edward Monovich and Karen Moss respond to society’s many ills, including global conflict, economic inequities and ecological disasters, with an eye toward raising consciousness and creating social change.
written by Thornton Wilder, directed by David Fox “The life of a village against the life of the stars” is how playwright Thornton Wilder described Our Town, a work that poignantly evokes eternal truths from the most common of circumstances.
written by Thornton Wilder, directed by David Fox$10 general, $5 with a Wheaton ID & seniors.
Artists Raúl Gonzalez, Edward Monovich and Karen Moss respond to society’s many ills, including global conflict, economic inequities and ecological disasters, with an eye toward raising consciousness and creating social change.
Silkscreen printer Helen Popinchalk re-creates selections from the series Los Caprichos by Francisco Goya in eye-popping neon color exhibited under black light.