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Browse through hundreds of events in Cedar Rapids, Iowa City, and the rest of Eastern Iowa
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Keyboard Festival: Faculty & Student Concert
<p>Coe College Faculty Keyboard Ensemble perform with Coe students. Daehler-Kitchin Auditorium in Marquis Hall.</p> 2023-01-23 20:00:00 -06002/04/237:00 p.m.Coe College- Daehler-Kitchin Auditorium in Marquis HallCedar Rapids -
Padding Gets in a Jam
<p>For over 60 years, British-born writer Michael Bond has delighted children and families all over the world with his stories about Paddington. Paddington is popular with both children and adults who feel a deep affection and warmth towards him. Paddington Gets in a Jam was selected as a New York Times Critic’s Pick when it debuted Off-Broadway in November 2019. Paddington’s adventures have been adapted several times for television and twice on the big screen, with Paddington and Paddington 2, with a third film in the works. A new Paddington TV series launched on Nickelodeon in 2020.</p>3/05/231:00 p.m.University of Dubuque Heritage CenterDubuque -
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Cats in the Library: An Adoption Event
<p>Are you looking to adopt your next best friend? Be sure to stop by the library to meet some adoptable kitties from Uno's Promise Animal Rescue.</p> 2022-12-22 13:00:00 -06003/04/2310:00 a.m.Hiawatha Public LibraryHiawatha -
Art in Roman Life
<p>An exhibition of more than 50 works, including 21 Roman portrait busts donated to the CRMA by Tom and Nan Riley in 1996. From coins to glass vessels to ceramic lamps to marble sculptures, this exhibition reveals more than 600 years of artistic production, which comprised daily life in Rome from the 1st century B.C. through the fall of the Roman Empire.</p> 2022-11-17 20:00:00 -060011/17/2212:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Art in Roman Life
<p>An exhibition of more than 50 works, including 21 Roman portrait busts donated to the CRMA by Tom and Nan Riley in 1996. From coins to glass vessels to ceramic lamps to marble sculptures, this exhibition reveals more than 600 years of artistic production, which comprised daily life in Rome from the 1st century B.C. through the fall of the Roman Empire.</p> 2022-11-15 04:00:00 -060011/15/2212:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Peytoe Bracelet in Color Gradient
<p>Use Delicas in flat peyote stitch to make this lovely bracelet. In this class you will learn how to do beaded color grading in a simple, yet efficient manner. Then you will learn to finish the edges of this bracelet with a picot technique. Finally, learn to add a clasp with a loop closure. That's three skills in one project!!No previous experience necessary. Instructor: Karen Kubby.</p><p>Registration is $88 and includes all materials and instruction. Register in person, via phone at 319 338-1566, or on-line.</p><p>Beading stations are distanced, and masks are required. Demos projected onto a large screen.</p> 2023-01-27 16:00:00 -06002/11/2310:00 a.m.Beadology IowaIowa City -
Hidden in Plain Sight: Tourism and Commemoration in Paris, Martinique, Mexico, Colombia and Argentina
<p>Travelers flock to iconic sites to connect with the past and other cultures. Visiting a monument, museum, palace, cathedral, or other cultural or historical site allows visitors to connect stories with a physical place. But what stories do such sites really tell, and whose stories do they overlook? Drawing on examples from Europe and the Americas, this four-week forum will explore how narratives of post-revolutionary and postcolonial tourist sites often obscure as much as they reveal about the pivotal social and political conflicts that occurred there. In week one, Joanne H. Pochobradsky Associate Professor of French Joyce Janca-Aji will introduce audiences to Paris and its often-missing landmarks to the French Revolution, World War II, and French colonialism. The second session, also led by Janca-Aji, will focus on the remembering and forgetting of racial slavery and colonialism in Martinique. Week three, presented by Assistant Professor of Spanish Laissa Rodríguez Moreno, will examine sites in the Americas that have erased or “repurposed” histories of conquest and repression, including the Aztec city of Tenochtitlán that lies under Mexico City’s Plaza Mayor o Zócalo, a prison in Colombia that became Gorgona Island Natural Park, and a former secret detention and extermination center in Argentina that is now a shopping mall. In the final session, Assistant Professor of Spanish Niall Peach will explore racial and environmental legacies of the Spanish Empire from the stately homes, gardens, and parks of northern Spain to the plantations and Cuban Revolution-era agricultural projects of Cuba. Throughout, the series will explore how narratives of cultural and national identity are created and how observant travelers might better be able to see what is hidden in plain sight.</p><p>Thursday Forum is held in Kesler Auditorium on the first floor of <a data-cke-saved-href="{CCM:BASE_URL}/why-coe/visitor-information/campus-map" href="{CCM%3ABASE_URL}/why-coe/visitor-information/campus-map">Hickok Hall</a>. Each weekly session begins with registration and refreshments from 8:45-9:15 AM, followed by the lecture until 11:30 AM. The presentations blend lecture, media such as film and music, and discussion.</p><p>Admission to each four-week forum series is $40. Admission to individual lectures and each session of two- and three-week forums is $12 per week. Admission includes the lecture and morning refreshments of coffee, tea and pastries. Payment can be made in person on Thursday mornings by cash or personal check. Credit card payments can be processed by <a data-cke-saved-href="http://commerce.cashnet.com/coestore" href="http://commerce.cashnet.com/coestore">registering online</a> in advance at www.coe.edu/thursday-forum.</p> 2022-08-29 11:30:00 -05002/02/238:45 a.m.Kesler Lecture Hall of Hickok HallCedar Rapids -
Hidden in Plain Sight: Tourism and Commemoration in Paris, Martinique, Mexico, Colombia and Argentina
<p>Travelers flock to iconic sites to connect with the past and other cultures. Visiting a monument, museum, palace, cathedral, or other cultural or historical site allows visitors to connect stories with a physical place. But what stories do such sites really tell, and whose stories do they overlook? Drawing on examples from Europe and the Americas, this four-week forum will explore how narratives of post-revolutionary and postcolonial tourist sites often obscure as much as they reveal about the pivotal social and political conflicts that occurred there. In week one, Joanne H. Pochobradsky Associate Professor of French Joyce Janca-Aji will introduce audiences to Paris and its often-missing landmarks to the French Revolution, World War II, and French colonialism. The second session, also led by Janca-Aji, will focus on the remembering and forgetting of racial slavery and colonialism in Martinique. Week three, presented by Assistant Professor of Spanish Laissa Rodríguez Moreno, will examine sites in the Americas that have erased or “repurposed” histories of conquest and repression, including the Aztec city of Tenochtitlán that lies under Mexico City’s Plaza Mayor o Zócalo, a prison in Colombia that became Gorgona Island Natural Park, and a former secret detention and extermination center in Argentina that is now a shopping mall. In the final session, Assistant Professor of Spanish Niall Peach will explore racial and environmental legacies of the Spanish Empire from the stately homes, gardens, and parks of northern Spain to the plantations and Cuban Revolution-era agricultural projects of Cuba. Throughout, the series will explore how narratives of cultural and national identity are created and how observant travelers might better be able to see what is hidden in plain sight.</p><p>Thursday Forum is held in Kesler Auditorium on the first floor of <a data-cke-saved-href="{CCM:BASE_URL}/why-coe/visitor-information/campus-map" href="{CCM%3ABASE_URL}/why-coe/visitor-information/campus-map">Hickok Hall</a>. Each weekly session begins with registration and refreshments from 8:45-9:15 AM, followed by the lecture until 11:30 AM. The presentations blend lecture, media such as film and music, and discussion.</p><p>Admission to each four-week forum series is $40. Admission to individual lectures and each session of two- and three-week forums is $12 per week. Admission includes the lecture and morning refreshments of coffee, tea and pastries. Payment can be made in person on Thursday mornings by cash or personal check. Credit card payments can be processed by <a data-cke-saved-href="http://commerce.cashnet.com/coestore" href="http://commerce.cashnet.com/coestore">registering online</a> in advance at www.coe.edu/thursday-forum.</p> 2023-02-09 11:30:00 -06002/09/238:45 a.m.Kesler Lecture Hall of Hickok HallCedar Rapids -
Hidden in Plain Sight: Tourism and Commemoration in Paris, Martinique, Mexico, Colombia and Argentina
<p>Travelers flock to iconic sites to connect with the past and other cultures. Visiting a monument, museum, palace, cathedral, or other cultural or historical site allows visitors to connect stories with a physical place. But what stories do such sites really tell, and whose stories do they overlook? Drawing on examples from Europe and the Americas, this four-week forum will explore how narratives of post-revolutionary and postcolonial tourist sites often obscure as much as they reveal about the pivotal social and political conflicts that occurred there. In week one, Joanne H. Pochobradsky Associate Professor of French Joyce Janca-Aji will introduce audiences to Paris and its often-missing landmarks to the French Revolution, World War II, and French colonialism. The second session, also led by Janca-Aji, will focus on the remembering and forgetting of racial slavery and colonialism in Martinique. Week three, presented by Assistant Professor of Spanish Laissa Rodríguez Moreno, will examine sites in the Americas that have erased or “repurposed” histories of conquest and repression, including the Aztec city of Tenochtitlán that lies under Mexico City’s Plaza Mayor o Zócalo, a prison in Colombia that became Gorgona Island Natural Park, and a former secret detention and extermination center in Argentina that is now a shopping mall. In the final session, Assistant Professor of Spanish Niall Peach will explore racial and environmental legacies of the Spanish Empire from the stately homes, gardens, and parks of northern Spain to the plantations and Cuban Revolution-era agricultural projects of Cuba. Throughout, the series will explore how narratives of cultural and national identity are created and how observant travelers might better be able to see what is hidden in plain sight.</p><p>Thursday Forum is held in Kesler Auditorium on the first floor of <a data-cke-saved-href="{CCM:BASE_URL}/why-coe/visitor-information/campus-map" href="{CCM%3ABASE_URL}/why-coe/visitor-information/campus-map">Hickok Hall</a>. Each weekly session begins with registration and refreshments from 8:45-9:15 AM, followed by the lecture until 11:30 AM. The presentations blend lecture, media such as film and music, and discussion.</p><p>Admission to each four-week forum series is $40. Admission to individual lectures and each session of two- and three-week forums is $12 per week. Admission includes the lecture and morning refreshments of coffee, tea and pastries. Payment can be made in person on Thursday mornings by cash or personal check. Credit card payments can be processed by <a data-cke-saved-href="http://commerce.cashnet.com/coestore" href="http://commerce.cashnet.com/coestore">registering online</a> in advance at www.coe.edu/thursday-forum.</p> 2023-02-16 11:30:00 -06002/16/238:45 a.m.Kesler Lecture Hall of Hickok HallCedar Rapids -
Hidden in Plain Sight: Tourism and Commemoration in Paris, Martinique, Mexico, Colombia and Argentina
<p>Travelers flock to iconic sites to connect with the past and other cultures. Visiting a monument, museum, palace, cathedral, or other cultural or historical site allows visitors to connect stories with a physical place. But what stories do such sites really tell, and whose stories do they overlook? Drawing on examples from Europe and the Americas, this four-week forum will explore how narratives of post-revolutionary and postcolonial tourist sites often obscure as much as they reveal about the pivotal social and political conflicts that occurred there. In week one, Joanne H. Pochobradsky Associate Professor of French Joyce Janca-Aji will introduce audiences to Paris and its often-missing landmarks to the French Revolution, World War II, and French colonialism. The second session, also led by Janca-Aji, will focus on the remembering and forgetting of racial slavery and colonialism in Martinique. Week three, presented by Assistant Professor of Spanish Laissa Rodríguez Moreno, will examine sites in the Americas that have erased or “repurposed” histories of conquest and repression, including the Aztec city of Tenochtitlán that lies under Mexico City’s Plaza Mayor o Zócalo, a prison in Colombia that became Gorgona Island Natural Park, and a former secret detention and extermination center in Argentina that is now a shopping mall. In the final session, Assistant Professor of Spanish Niall Peach will explore racial and environmental legacies of the Spanish Empire from the stately homes, gardens, and parks of northern Spain to the plantations and Cuban Revolution-era agricultural projects of Cuba. Throughout, the series will explore how narratives of cultural and national identity are created and how observant travelers might better be able to see what is hidden in plain sight.</p><p>Thursday Forum is held in Kesler Auditorium on the first floor of <a data-cke-saved-href="{CCM:BASE_URL}/why-coe/visitor-information/campus-map" href="{CCM%3ABASE_URL}/why-coe/visitor-information/campus-map">Hickok Hall</a>. Each weekly session begins with registration and refreshments from 8:45-9:15 AM, followed by the lecture until 11:30 AM. The presentations blend lecture, media such as film and music, and discussion.</p><p>Admission to each four-week forum series is $40. Admission to individual lectures and each session of two- and three-week forums is $12 per week. Admission includes the lecture and morning refreshments of coffee, tea and pastries. Payment can be made in person on Thursday mornings by cash or personal check. Credit card payments can be processed by <a data-cke-saved-href="http://commerce.cashnet.com/coestore" href="http://commerce.cashnet.com/coestore">registering online</a> in advance at www.coe.edu/thursday-forum.</p> 2023-02-23 11:30:00 -06002/23/238:45 a.m.Kesler Lecture Hall of Hickok HallCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-01-14 16:00:00 -06002/04/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-02-11 16:00:00 -06002/11/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
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Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-02-18 16:00:00 -06002/18/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-02-25 16:00:00 -06002/25/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-03-04 16:00:00 -06003/04/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-03-11 16:00:00 -06003/11/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-03-18 16:00:00 -05003/18/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-03-25 16:00:00 -05003/25/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-01 16:00:00 -05004/01/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-08 16:00:00 -05004/08/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-15 16:00:00 -05004/15/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-22 16:00:00 -05004/22/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-29 16:00:00 -05004/29/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-05-06 16:00:00 -05005/06/2310:00 a.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-03-09 20:00:00 -06003/09/2312:00 p.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
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Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-25 16:00:00 -05004/25/2312:00 p.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-26 16:00:00 -05004/26/2312:00 p.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-28 16:00:00 -05004/28/2312:00 p.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-06 20:00:00 -05004/06/2312:00 p.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids -
Built This Way: Architecture in Art
<p>Built This Way: Architecture in Art<br><br>February 4-May 14, 2023<br><br>Art and architecture are often thought of as related but separate artistic forms. There are however, situations when the two overlap: murals in buildings, art museums as architectural statements, etc. Architecture sometimes appears in art—setting the scene in paintings, drawings, photographs, and prints. Sometimes architecture is the subject of the artwork. This exhibition looks at the appearance of architecture in art from the museum’s collection, exploring the many ways in which architecture plays an important and pivotal role.<br><br></p> 2023-04-13 20:00:00 -05004/13/2312:00 p.m.Cedar Rapids Museum of ArtCedar Rapids