Special Exhibit – Home Plate Don’t Move: Baseball & Community
Exhibit Dates: March 17, 2018 – February 8, 2019 “JUST TAKE THE BALL AND THROW IT WHERE YOU WANT TO. THROW STRIKES. HOME PLATE DON’T MOVE.” – SATCHEL PAIGE Spring […]
Exhibit Dates: March 17, 2018 – February 8, 2019 “JUST TAKE THE BALL AND THROW IT WHERE YOU WANT TO. THROW STRIKES. HOME PLATE DON’T MOVE.” – SATCHEL PAIGE Spring […]
Exhibit dates: March 19, 2019 – August 22, 2019 Comic Stripped: A Revealing Look at Southern Stereotypes in Cartoons tackles assumptions – real and imagined – about the South as
Exhibit Dates: 9/21/19 – 12/31/19 Carolina Calling: The Photography of Daniel Coston celebrates the work of Charlotte-based music photographer Daniel Coston and the North Carolina musicians he has photographed over
Exhibit Dates: 2/14/2020 – 12/31/2020 For as long as country music has existed in its many forms, including bluegrass and folk, women have played important roles. Most of us are
Exhibit Dates: 2/9/2021 – 8/7/2021 African American Builders and Architects explores the extraordinary buildings across the state of NC constructed by free black artisans and slaves during the pre-Civil War
Exhibition Dates: 9/10/21 – 12/23/21 “Jack,” a classic folk hero whose stories and adventures have become entwined in Appalachian history and culture, has worldwide origins. Through the books of author
Exhibit Dates: 2/8/22 – 9/4/22 A Symphony for the Road: An Avett Brothers Retrospective Featuring the Photography of Daniel Coston is the first-ever authorized exhibition to detail the ongoing career
Exhibit Dates: 10/11/22 – 12/31/22 By the middle of the 20th Century, photography had undergone a complete metamorphosis in American culture. The process of taking a photograph had gone from
Exhibit Dates: 2/7/23 – 7/1/23 The Jagged Path: The African Diaspora in Western North Carolina in Craft, Music, and Dance is an exhibit which was produced by the Blowing Rock
Exhibit Dates: 8/8/23 – 11/4/23 Based on collections at the University of South Carolina Lancaster’s Native American Studies Center, the Language of Clay exhibit examines Catawba Indian pottery through contemporary and historical