Museum Closed

The entire Museum will be closed to the public New Year’s Eve in observance of the holiday.

Museum Closed

The entire Museum will be closed Christmas Day in observance of the holiday.

Museum Closed

The entire Museum will be closed to the public Christmas Eve in observance of the holiday. 

Museum Closed

The entire Museum will be closed all day in observance of the Thanksgiving Holiday. 

Medieval Mentalities on Weapons and Warfare

Join Bretton Rodriguez, Ph.D. and Edward Schoolman, Ph.D. as they explore the relationships between medieval cultures and their weapons. The development of new and better martial technology shaped the nature of warfare in the medieval and early modern worlds, and it transformed the practical, decorative, social, and metaphorical values of weapons of war. 

Bretton Rodriguez, Ph.D. is a teaching assistant professor of Core Humanities at the University of Nevada, Reno. He is a specialist in the literature, history, and culture of medieval and early modern Iberia. His research focuses on the use and manipulation of the past in historical narratives.

Ned Schoolman, Ph.D. is an associate professor in the History Department at the University of Nevada, Reno.  His current research centers on facets of nobility, the process of migration, and environmental change during the Middle Ages in Italy.

The Art Bite lecture series is supported by Nevada Humanities with additional sponsorship and free admission for students supported by the Core Humanities Program at the University of Nevada, Reno. 

Edward Hopper: Drawing, Painting, Memory, Imagination

Carter E. Foster presents a broad overview of Edward Hopper’s creative process. Starting with his early work in New York and his formative travels to Paris, Foster will explore the ways in which Hopper developed his mature style as well as his love of ambiguity and the uncanny. Using suites of drawings for major works, Foster will delve deeply into how Hopper conceived certain paintings, and how observation of the real world combined with his imagination created the disquieting atmospheres for which he is celebrated. During the presentation we will explore Hopper’s masterpieces, including Early Sunday Morning (1930), Nighthawks (1942), New York Movie (1939), and Office at Night (1940).

In a museum career spanning twenty-eight years, Carter E. Foster has specialized in the history of drawing and the continuities of artistic practice from the Renaissance to the present, and has organized dozens of exhibitions covering this range of art history. He started his position as Deputy Director for Curatorial Affairs and Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Blanton Museum of Art in September of 2016. Carter worked at the Whitney Museum of American Art for over 11 years, serving as the Steven and Ann Ames Curator of Drawing, and he was on the team curators who developed the Whitney’s inaugural display in its new building, America is Hard to See. He developed the 2013 exhibition Hopper Drawing and edited and co-authored its catalogue. Prior to the Whitney, he held curatorial positions at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Cleveland Museum of Art, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.

This program will be held in the Wayne L. Prim Theater.

Curator Walkthrough: JoAnne Northrup on: “The World Stage”

Join us for an exhibition walkthrough of “The World Stage, Contemporary Art from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation” led by JoAnne Northrup, Curatorial Director and Curator of Contemporary Art. Guests will enjoy a guided walkthrough of the exhibition which includes canonical 20th century artists such as Helen Frankenthaler, Robert Rauschenberg, and Andy Warhol, as well as leading 21st century artists such as Jeffrey Gibson, Mickalene Thomas, and Kehinde Wiley—an artist best known for his portrait of President Obama which hangs in the National Portrait Gallery. Northrup will discuss her motivation for selecting these 100 artworks, drawn from Schnitzer’s collection of more than 14,000 works, and introduce visitors to some of the lesser-known artists in the mix.

The Art Bite lecture series is supported by Nevada Humanities with additional sponsorship and free admission for students supported by the Core Humanities Program at the University of Nevada, Reno. 

Teen Art Night 2020

Join the Holland Project and the Nevada Museum of Art for our annual “teen-takeover” featuring live music, DJs, gallery access, interactive adventures, hands-on workshops, special performances and more!

This year’s theme: HAIR – hair as material, a canvas, a symbol of rebellion, of new possibilities, an expression of identity, gender, a fashion statement.

This year’s theme will be embedded throughout the night’s activities and everyone is invited to get in on the action. Make an outfit out of hair, hunt the galleries for hair expressions, create a wig out of non-traditional objects, showcase your own identity with a unique hair statement, create some accessories.

Teachers/parents may submit a request for a fee waiver/reduction to jessica.imus@nevadaart.org if required. 

Sponsored by NV Energy

Shabbat Dinner with Distinguished Guest, Jordan D. Schnitzer

Join us for a special dinner honoring philanthropist and art collector Jordan D. Schnitzer. Join us at 6 pm for a gallery preview of “The World Stage: Contemporary Art from the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation.” Following the exhibition preview, guests will enjoy a traditional Shabbat dinner prepared by chez louie in the Nightingale Sky Room with remarks from our honored guest in conversation with JoAnne Northrup, Curatorial Director and Curator of Contemporary Art.

Gallery preview at 6 pm. Dinner will begin at 6:30 pm in the Nightingale Sky Room. Advanced reservations are required. Please register by March 10.

Seating for dinner is open and service will be family style. Pricing is inclusive of gratuity. To request group seating, please call or email Heidi Loeb at 775.398.7235

Jordan D. Schnitzer is President of Harsch Investment Properties, a privately-owned real estate investment company based in Portland, Oregon, which owns and operates over 27 million square feet of office, multi-tenant industrial, multi-family and retail properties in six western states, including Nevada. He is also a world-class collector of contemporary art with a collection that currently numbers over 14,000 works.

False Friends: Art History and Labor Studies with Dr. Brett M. Van Hoesen

Art History and Labor Studies are often considered false friends, two fields that investigate very different subjects. Yet, there’s a long history of art that represents labor and working conditions. This talk will focus on the intersection of art and labor in painting, photography, and sculpture of the 20th century with a focus on the E. L. Wiegand Collection at the Nevada Museum of Art.

Dr. Brett Van Hoesen is Associate Professor of Art History at the University of Nevada, Reno.

The Art Bite lecture series is supported by Nevada Humanities with additional sponsorship and free admission for students supported by the Core Humanities Program at the University of Nevada, Reno.