Exhibits of Paintings

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American Art

American Art

02-07-2026 8:00 pm
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This winter, the Worcester Art Museum will unveil newly reimagined galleries dedicated to its renowned collection of American art from the colonial period through the 19th century. The fully redesigned space will showcase more than 130 works of art representing a diverse range of artists, media, styles, and stories. Scheduled to coincide with the 250th anniversary of the United States, the galleries will address the achievements, complexities, and enduring relevance of American art and history. Artworks will be grouped thematically, inviting viewers to draw connections between different time periods, perspectives, and artistic voices. Each section will delve into a subject that resonates throughout the history of American art and into the present day. Explore wide-ranging visions of nature, the ways art has been used to construct identities, the stories of New England makers, the global influences on American art, and more as you rediscover this signature area of the Museum’s collection. The American Art Galleries are curated by Karen Sherry, Curator of American Art. The Museum also sought input from a diverse group of community advisors, including representatives of various cultural and educational organizations.

The Twenty-Second Annual College Show

02-11-2026 8:00 pm - 04-12-2026 11:00 pm
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The Twenty-Second Annual College Show

ArtsWorcester Main Galleries

The Twenty-Second Annual College Show is a juried exhibition open to all undergraduate college students studying at any Massachusetts college or university, in any major. The deadline to submit online is December 17 at midnight. Notifications will be made by January 9, 2026. Cash prizes will be awarded and announced at the opening reception. This year's juror is Andrea Olmstead, Assistant Professor of art in ceramics, sculpture, and drawing at Fitchburg State University. Learn more about the juror here.

The College Show has no theme. Bring us your favorite piece from your art class or your personal artistic practice, or show off your latest experiment. You do not need to be an art student or in an art class to submit. Students may submit a maximum of three pieces for consideration, and must complete a separate submission form for each piece. When submitting more than one piece, please return to the original link to make additional submissions.

A Weather Eye: Art and Early Modern Meteorology

A Weather Eye: Art and Early Modern Meteorology

03-28-2026 8:00 pm - 06-28-2026 11:00 pm
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Does it look like rain? From mythology to meteorology, journey through the dramatic scientific and social shift in Europe and America’s collective understanding of weather from the 16th to early 19th century. Bringing together more than forty works on paper, early weather forecasting devices, and more, A Weather Eye charts more than three hundred years of humanity’s evolving relationship with the natural world. Explore the mythology of weather and the classical theory of the four elements (earth, air, water, and fire). Delve into stories of witchcraft and sorcery, and the ways weather was divined through folk knowledge, astrology, and “weather wising.” Learn about the idolized innovators of the scientific revolution, and make light of the storm with satirical prints of cats, dogs, and more raining from the sky. This exhibition is curated by Olivia Stone, Assistant Curator of Prints, Drawings, and Photography.

Fever Dreams of a Cool-Breathed Earth

Fever Dreams of a Cool-Breathed Earth

04-11-2026 8:00 pm - 08-16-2025 11:00 pm
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Christa Donner and Andrew S. Yang

Immerse yourself in Fever Dreams of a Cool-Breathed Earth, a new exhibition created for the Worcester Art Museum by Christa Donner and Andrew S. YangTheir first joint museum exhibition and largest collaboration to date, the multi-sensory installation situates the experience of weather and the seasons in an examination of climate change in the twenty-first century. The artists propose that: “as warm-blooded creatures on an intensely warming Earth, we find ourselves seeking new ways to adapt our bodies to the planetary one—both have a fever in need of cooling. This exhibition reflects on climate-driven extreme heat and visualizes the deeply material and figurative relationship of our bodies to the changing planetary body as complex systems in transformation.” 

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