Build Your Own Moss Terrarium
Lauritzen Gardens 100 Bancroft Street, Omaha, NE, United StatesCreate a moss terrarium for gorgeous, green decor!
— dedicated to promoting the growth and appreciation of the arts in the Omaha community.
Create a moss terrarium for gorgeous, green decor!
Calling all curious minds and creative problem-solvers! Get ready to unleash your inner inventor in Maker's Lab, a unique program where art and science collide in a whirlwind of exciting challenges and hands-on activities.
In The Market For Blues, Omaha’s Blues Fest is an all-day music festival featuring 12+ hours of music by 35+ bands at 10+ venues in Omaha’s Old Market, Capitol District, and Downtown Omaha on Saturday, Aug. 3, 2024.
Soak in the irresistible music of Kathy Tyree, Ananias Montague & Friends at the free Music at Miller Park Series!
Build strength and stability while reducing stress, anxiety, and tension with Tai Chi and Qigong in the garden.
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.
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.