Norman Rockwell and His Contemporaries
Featuring original paintings, works on paper, vintage posters, and accompanying artifacts, this exhibition highlights the changes to daily life in America during three very different decades: the “Fabulous Forties” to the “Sensational Sixties.”
Into a New West
Exploring cultural topics such as the environment, feminism, and social commentary, this exhibit showcases a shift from traditional representations to new ideologies and expressions of the West.
A Passion for Collecting American Art
By embracing an organic approach to collecting and by freely integrating multiple subjects, time frames, and media, the Lynches created lively conversations about artistic creativity, regional styles, and evolving traditions in America.
The Ephemeral Beauty and Variety of Plant Life
Spotlighting the ephemeral beauty and variety of plant life, the Leigh Yawkey Woodson Art Museum is featuring two botanical art exhibitions.
Storytelling in Renaissance Maiolica
This focused exhibition brings together a small selection of tin-glazed earthenware produced in the duchy of Urbino, Italy, in the 16th century.
Flores Mexicanas: A Lindbergh Love Story
The whereabouts of one of the largest paintings by artist Alfredo Ramos Martinez has been widely unknown to art scholars for decades, but is now on view for the public.
Paul Gauguin: The Art of Invention
This summer, you can view the range of Gauguin’s artistic output from his early Impressionist paintings to his iconic works from Brittany and Tahiti to his fascinating exploration of three-dimensional objects.
European Paintings on View at Lyman Allyn
Enjoy a selection of portraits, history paintings, still lifes, genre scenes, and landscapes from the early Renaissance through the 1800s.
Chiura Obata: An American Modern
This is the first touring retrospective devoted to this Japanese-American artist, who is represented by more than 150 watercolors, paintings, prints, and screens.
Life Is a Highway: Art and American Car Culture
To be presented only at Toledo — a major car manufacturing center — this is the first U.S. exhibition to offer an inclusive, historical overview of this theme with an emphasis on the Midwest.