Arts for ME! Spring Exhibition
KANEKO 1111 Jones St, Omaha, NE, United StatesArts for ME! and KANEKO invite you to see the Spring 2024 Semester exhibit.
— dedicated to promoting the growth and appreciation of the arts in the Omaha community.
Arts for ME! and KANEKO invite you to see the Spring 2024 Semester exhibit.
Fascinating collaboration of opera and local artists culminating in an exhibition at the Joslyn Castle Carriage House Gallery.
With inspirations that orbit centuries from ancient Indigenous pottery to Moai statues to Land Art, Halfmoon interrogates the intersection of tradition, history, gender, and personal experience.
From wordplay with the actual letters that comprise “BLACK,” to utilizing the expanse of shades of black house paint—including as Nightfall, Soot, Ebony Field, and Black Beauty—to posing the question, “If the color black had a sound, what would it be?,” Benjamin calls attention to the color’s deep historical and social resonance.
Arts for ME! and KANEKO invite you to see the Spring 2024 Semester exhibit.
Fascinating collaboration of opera and local artists culminating in an exhibition at the Joslyn Castle Carriage House Gallery.
With inspirations that orbit centuries from ancient Indigenous pottery to Moai statues to Land Art, Halfmoon interrogates the intersection of tradition, history, gender, and personal experience.
From wordplay with the actual letters that comprise “BLACK,” to utilizing the expanse of shades of black house paint—including as Nightfall, Soot, Ebony Field, and Black Beauty—to posing the question, “If the color black had a sound, what would it be?,” Benjamin calls attention to the color’s deep historical and social resonance.
Arts for ME! and KANEKO invite you to see the Spring 2024 Semester exhibit.
Fascinating collaboration of opera and local artists culminating in an exhibition at the Joslyn Castle Carriage House Gallery.
With inspirations that orbit centuries from ancient Indigenous pottery to Moai statues to Land Art, Halfmoon interrogates the intersection of tradition, history, gender, and personal experience.
From wordplay with the actual letters that comprise “BLACK,” to utilizing the expanse of shades of black house paint—including as Nightfall, Soot, Ebony Field, and Black Beauty—to posing the question, “If the color black had a sound, what would it be?,” Benjamin calls attention to the color’s deep historical and social resonance.