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UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS
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NOVEMBER 1, 2024 THROUGH JANUARY 24, 2025
IN THE ATRIUM & TEMPORARY GALLERY (3 & 4)
Carlsbad, New Mexico
Cultural Currency: Contemporary Art from the Riemer Collection explores the innovative ways artists use money as a medium to expand its worth beyond a predetermined denomination.
CRAZY WORLD AIN'T IT:
The Art of John Van Hamersveld
JUNE 2026 THROUGH AUGUST 2026
IN THE ATRIUM & TEMPORARY GALLERY (3 & 4)
Carlsbad, New Mexico
Iconic Los Angeles pop artist and graphic designer John Van Hamersveld's inspirational creative output is presented in the new traveling exhibition, CRAZY WORLD AIN'T IT: The Art of John Van Hamersveld. This exhibition follows previous museum exhibitions of Van Hamersveld's work, including DRAWING ATTENTION, at the California State University Art Gallery, Northridge, CA, in 2013, and ERA OF COOL at the Westmoreland Museum of Art, Greensburg, PA, in 2019. This new exhibition highlights 60 years of Van Hamersveld's works: paintings, drawings, prints, posters, album covers, digital works, photomurals of his public works, and more. Organized by Landau Traveling Exhibitions, Los Angeles, CA, the exhibition is available for presentation at museums world wide through 2027. Find more information on this traveling exhibit from Landau Traveling Exhibitions, Here.
José Guadalupe Posada:
Legendary Printmaker of Mexico
SEPTEMBER 2026 THROUGH DECEMBER 2026
IN THE ATRIUM & TEMPORARY GALLERY (3 & 4)
Carlsbad, New Mexico
One of Mexico’s most celebrated artists was a printmaker, a common man who died a pauper, his body interred in an unmarked grave. Yet, José Guadalupe Posada reached his countrymen through perhaps more than 20,000 images documenting nearly every aspect of life. As Mexico modernized in the late 19th century, its capital bustled with published materials to satisfy the growing metropolis and its budding middle class, intelligentsias, and thousands of new residents relocating from the countryside. Employed by the visionary publisher Antonio Vanegas Arroyo, Posada created expressive images reflecting and informing the transitioning culture of Mexico City’s residents, many of whom were illiterate. Posada’s satirical skeletons, or calaveras, have become the most iconic and celebrated of his work. Find more information on this traveling exhibit from Landau Traveling Exhibitions, Here.