James Watrous Gallery
This is a story about creative, unlikely collaborations, and connections between artists, scientists, and musicians.
Dakota Mace weaves her understanding of the symbolic abstractions in the Diné creation story into her artwork.
Kyoung Ae Cho’s patient, collaborative approach to working with natural and recycled materials is a poignant metaphor for our relationship with the environment.
The relationship between science and society is an important one and arguably a measure of the intellectual and aspirational health of our civilization.
Trained in woodworking, Andrew Redington uses deconstructed vintage furniture to make his sculpture and prints.
Robin Jebavy's paintings describe a shimmering infinite field. Their kaleidoscopic impact is almost hallucinatory, like an ecstatic vision composed in stained glass.
Join the Wisconsin Academy at our James Watrous Gallery for a reception celebrating the exhibits New Domesticity,
An installation by social artist Borealis, paired with solo exhibitions by Lois Bielefeld and Comfort Wasikhongo.
This solo exhibition by artist Emily Arthur examines connections between seemingly unrelated events, past and present, to make visible the land as a living matter that holds a story.
A solo exhibition by painter Comfort Wasikhongo, paired with photographer Lois Bielefeld's solo show and an installation by social artist Borealis.
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Contact Us
contact@wisconsinacademy.org
Wisconsin Academy Offices
1922 University Avenue
Madison, Wisconsin 53726
Phone: 608.733.6633
James Watrous Gallery
3rd Floor, Overture Center for the Arts
201 State Street
Madison, WI 53703
Phone: 608.733.6633 x25