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W&L’s most recent museum exhibition, “Mother Clay: The Pottery of Three Pueblo Women,” brought new artists into the university’s collection and connected the campus community in unexpected ways.
W&L’s most recent museum exhibition, “Mother Clay: The Pottery of Three Pueblo Women,” brought new artists into the university’s collection and connected the campus community in unexpected ways.
The show will be on display in Wilson Hall’s Lykes Atrium in conjunction with Esteban Ramón Pérez’s solo exhibition “Distorted Myths,” which will be on view in the Staniar Gallery Oct. 10 through Nov. 2.
Lepage’s talk “Borderlands Arts Pedagogy” will be held on Sept. 28.
Professor Andrea Lepage recently published two essays based on exhibits in W&L's Staniar Gallery.
Joel Bernstein ’57 brings his passion for Native American art to W&L with a groundbreaking new exhibition.
The $7,000 Virginia Humanities grant will support an upcoming exhibit in Staniar Gallery.