Alisha Kerlin In The News

Las Vegas Review Journal
While several entertainment and recreation venues are shuttering amid COVID-19 concerns, Las Vegas museums are planning to remain open.
Hyperallergic
An interview series spotlighting some of the creative community members in the US Southwest.
Las Vegas Review Journal
Name a female scientist. Could you do it?
Las Vegas Weekly
Alisha Kerlin holds up a white 3D print of a 2,000-year-old Mesoamerican animal sculpture like a proud mom at a soccer game. “I have a very intimate relationship with this collection,” she beams. For the duration of our museum tour, she carries the replica around, clutching it under her arm like a football. “I didn’t realize his toe was broken,” she says, as if she should have traveled back in time 2 millennia to stop the damage. If she could, she would.
Las Vegas Review Journal
Welcome to Andrew Schoultz’s world.
Las Vegas Review Journal
It’s easy to take museums for granted. Or, worse, to think of them just as warehouses for stuff from the past.
Las Vegas Weekly
The fine arts space soon to be known as the Barrick Museum of Art began life in 1967, even before it was part of the 51ԹϺ campus proper. In 1975, it became the 51ԹϺ Museum of Natural History and moved into the school’s old gym space (hence the presence of cartoon-wolf mascot Beauregard on the gallery floor today). Its first contemporary art exhibit took place in 1986, three years before the Marjorie Barrick part of the name got added.
Las Vegas Weekly
The unlikeliest Vegas trend in 2016, besides poke bowls and making your own flip flops, might just be public art.