Cyanotype Printing
Lauritzen Gardens 100 Bancroft Street, Omaha, NE, United StatesExplore cyanotype with natural flowers on paper, and take home your own beautiful artwork.
— dedicated to promoting the growth and appreciation of the arts in the Omaha community.
Explore cyanotype with natural flowers on paper, and take home your own beautiful artwork.
Tony Award Winner The Play That Goes Wrong is the side-splitting farce that has taken the theatrical world by storm.
When a Chinese-American basketball player from the streets of San Francisco lands in Beijing in 1989, he is caught in the middle of a cultural and political battle on and off the court.
Neo-Custodians: Woven Narratives of Heritage, Cultural Memory, and Belonging focuses on the historical aspect of textiles as a vehicle for communication and representation. Linking this ancient form of expression to contemporary artworks inspired by this legacy, the thirteen artists in the exhibition engage intentionally with materials bearing complex histories.
Paolo Arao makes sewn paintings, weavings, and site-responsive installations that are rooted in geometric abstraction. This exhibition will showcase Arao’s work over the past 5 years including work he began while a resident at Bemis Center in the spring of 2020 as well as site-specific installations utilizing the architecture of Bemis Center’s galleries.
Tony Award Winner The Play That Goes Wrong is the side-splitting farce that has taken the theatrical world by storm.
When a Chinese-American basketball player from the streets of San Francisco lands in Beijing in 1989, he is caught in the middle of a cultural and political battle on and off the court.
Learn how to create stunning portraits in the gardens!
Come see “Meet me at the fence ok bye” from artist Leslie Diuguid, on exhibit from February 10 to March 9, 2024.
Neo-Custodians: Woven Narratives of Heritage, Cultural Memory, and Belonging focuses on the historical aspect of textiles as a vehicle for communication and representation. Linking this ancient form of expression to contemporary artworks inspired by this legacy, the thirteen artists in the exhibition engage intentionally with materials bearing complex histories.
Paolo Arao makes sewn paintings, weavings, and site-responsive installations that are rooted in geometric abstraction. This exhibition will showcase Arao’s work over the past 5 years including work he began while a resident at Bemis Center in the spring of 2020 as well as site-specific installations utilizing the architecture of Bemis Center’s galleries.
Learn how to create stunning portraits in the gardens!