The Art Fiesta, hosted by the Claremont Lewis Museum of Art, helped artists show off their creations and promote their business in the community Nov. 6 at the Padua Hills Theatre.
University of La Verne staff and faculty introduced “An Artful Reframing,” a collaborative effort to reflect on the University's history and shine a light on previously underrepresented voices, before about 25 community members in the Campus Center Ballroom Monday, with 19 more who joined via Zoom.
In association with the “Welcome Here!” exhibition showing in the Harris Gallery, the department of art and art history held an artist’s talk featuring Arnold Turnstall, photographer and art director at the University Galleries at Myers School of Art in Akron, Ohio, and one of the 16 artists in the show that closed this week.
Vibrant colored walls, paintings, ofrendas, photos and sculptures made up the Ontario Museum of History and Art’s 24th Dia de Los Muertos exhibit, “Cempasúchil: Instruments of the Wind.”
The monthly Claremont Art Walk had residents walking from gallery to gallery observing the various forms of art displayed at sites across the Claremont Village, including the Claremont Lewis Museum of Art at 200 W. First Street.
Pictures of Joshua Tree landscapes, natural births and a makeup tutorial video on how to disrupt facial recognition cameras were among the images filling the narrow hallway that is the Irene Carlson Gallery, on view until Oct. 14.