Kids Art Class, in Ralston
Pause Coffe Shop 7515 Main St, Ralston, NebraskaKids Art Class. Join artist & teacher, Becky Korinek, for an art class for kids this summer. All Supplies provided! Tuesdays at Pause Coffee Shop.
— dedicated to promoting the growth and appreciation of the arts in the Omaha community.
Kids Art Class. Join artist & teacher, Becky Korinek, for an art class for kids this summer. All Supplies provided! Tuesdays at Pause Coffee Shop.
Feel free to tour all the featured 40+ local professional photographers depicting realistic landscapes, figures, and portraits.
Using glass as a medium to utilize the transmission of light and brilliancy of the glass colors to enhance the beauty of her subjects, Borgschulte hopes to capture the viewer’s interest as hers has been captured by nature.
A collection of bug sculptures created by students enrolled in the adapted art program, “Arts For ME!”
Benson Theatre is leading the way to a new community space with doors open more frequently, ideas flowing more freely, and communities colliding for fun, innovation, and celebration.
6:30 pm talk, 5:30 pm cash bar social hour. Free admission. Omaha Conservatory of Music is located at 7023 Cass Street. On September 10, The Joslyn will open as a […]
Brace yourself for a night of soul-stirring blues with the incomparable Joe Bonamassa! Joe Bonamassa is one of today's top live performers and this one-time-only Blues Deluxe tour is not to be missed!
Feel free to tour all the featured 40+ local professional photographers depicting realistic landscapes, figures, and portraits.
Using glass as a medium to utilize the transmission of light and brilliancy of the glass colors to enhance the beauty of her subjects, Borgschulte hopes to capture the viewer’s interest as hers has been captured by nature.
A collection of bug sculptures created by students enrolled in the adapted art program, “Arts For ME!”
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.