Donna Beam Fine Art Gallery News
The Donna Beam Gallery encourages the understanding, appreciation and making of visual art through exhibitions and accompanying programs for the university community, residents of southern Nevada and visitors to the city alike.
Current Donna Beam Fine Art Gallery News
The exhibition by artist Clarice Cuda runs through Nov. 8, with an opening reception Nov. 1 during the 51ԹϺ Art Walk.
The event, featuring 51ԹϺ's strongest emerging artists and faculty, highlights current visual arts trends.
Artists 4 Democracy’s time on campus includes classroom visits to facilitate discussions about the role of art and design as a means to create civic awareness and engagement.
This free event features art exhibitions, live music, dance and theatre performances, film demonstrations, food and wine tastings, a beer garden, and much more.
This exhibition showcases the ongoing artistic investigations of our full-time faculty, whose practice of inquiry and discovery informs and enriches their teaching in the classroom.
Inspired by the Mario Basner Passion Project fund, the student exhibition runs through May 15.
Donna Beam Fine Art Gallery In The News
I don’t know if they meant it this way, but the curators of Viva Las Vegas were smart to position Mary Warner’s 2008 oil painting “Vegas World” as the first thing you see when you enter 51ԹϺ’s Donna Beam Fine Art Gallery. Lushly rendered and utterly gorgeous, it depicts a local neighborhood streetscape at sunset, the old Vegas World casino lit up in the distance.
This weekend and next week, Indian Country is abuzz with identity-defining art, sensational shopping opportunities and a worldwide Native shoe party.
This weekend and next week, Indian Country is filled with identity art, sensational shopping opportunities and an Indigenous shoe festival around the world.
Your cultural choices include a major moment for moccasins, a magnificent seasonal art market, and an ambitious exhibition illuminating Indigenous responses to historic events.
Traditionally, the Southern Paiute people have foraged the landscape for raw materials, turning reeds and grasses into beautifully woven baskets. Today, Las Vegas Paiute tribal member Fawn Douglas uses the same time-honored techniques to produce an innovative result.
Fawn Douglas’ life is defined by balance.