News: Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art
The exhibition runs Jan. 15 - April 2 and dates, times, and other details of the performances will be announced on the Barrick Museum’s Instagram, Facebook, and Twitter accounts.
Following a public call for submissions, what returned tackled topics engendered by "Justice" from police brutality and Black Lives Matter to transgender civil rights, protest, decay and erosion, lives lost, equity, and reform.
Reasons for hope aren't just confined to UNLV's academic halls. Here are just a few places where 2020 inspired staff and students to find new paths forward.
The exhibition, presented with the Womxn of Color Arts Festival, opens Nov. 9 and runs until Feb. 19.
From student worker to full-time employee, Rebecca Paulson says stepping out of her comfort zone has led her forward.
The Las Vegas Womxn of Color Arts Festival is committed to generating more art events that highlight the work of local womxn artists who are Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.
This powerful presentation by a new generation of Latinx and Indigenous artists challenges Eurocentric museum practices.
UNLV graduate art students take “library” as their prompt in the upcoming group exhibition on display through Nov. 29.
New solo exhibition at UNLV's Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art tells stories of race and womanhood.
"Still Here Now" features nine artists who are recipients of the Nevada Arts Council’s Artist Fellowship program.
Assistant art professor Doughty is a visual storyteller whose practice engages with socio-economic, racial, and gender-based issues.
Excerpts brings together artworks from all the different collections held at the Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art, including the internationally renowned Dorothy and Herbert Vogel Collection and works originally collected by the Las Vegas Art Museum.