Museums & Galleries | Fall Preview 2024

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Museums & Galleries | Fall Preview 2024
Artist Matthew Schreiber with ‘Cube Maquette,’ part of the exhibit ‘Matthew Schreiber: Sauron, Bowie, and Maquettes.’ Through Sept. 29. at the Butler Institute of American Art. (Image courtesy of the Butler Institute of American Art)

Museums & Galleries | Fall Preview 2024 | Tell us about your event! We give priority to the greater Youngstown-Warren, Ohio area, Columbiana County and western Pennsylvania.

MAHONING VALLEY

Arms Family Museum of Local History. 648 Wick Ave., Youngstown 44502. 330-743-2589. mahoninghistory.org…. Houses the furnishings of Wilford and Olive Arms and local history exhibits (permanent and changing). Continuing: “Behind the Scenes: Servants of Greystone.” “Tailor Made: Local Clothing and Accessories.” “Tod Family Treasures: 19th Century Heirlooms.” “Mid Century Modern in the Mahoning Valley.”  “The Story of My House: Arts & Crafts Design at Greystone.” “The Benjamin Franklin Wirt Collection.” “Maple Turner III City Scenes.” “The Hands-On-History Room.” Noon-4 p.m., Tuesday-Sunday.


Art on Park. 180 N. Park Ave., Warren 44481. 330-469-1729. trumbullarts.org…. Gallery and creative space in downtown Warren offers pop-up and extended shows.


Butler Institute of American Art. 524 Wick Ave., Youngstown 44502. 330-743-1711. butlerart.com…. Founded in 1919 by Youngstown industrialist Joseph Butler. Offers a permanent collection and changing exhibits. Opening: “Allied Artists Award Winners.” Allied Artists of America of New York will hold its 111th annual juried exhibition in the MacIntosh and Finnegan/Hynes galleries. Sept. 8-Nov. 10. “Alex Katz: Collaborations with Poets.” Katz began exhibiting his work in 1954 and came of age in the years between abstract expressionism and pop art. The exhibit takes an intimate look at his long-time collaborations with poets and includes print portfolios, books, unique cutouts and portraits of poets Alice Notley and Frank O’Hara. A public reception will occur Sunday, Sept. 15 with the artist’s son, poet Vincent Katz, and Valerie Carberry, partner in Gray Gallery. Sept. 15-Nov. 17. “Mateo Blanco: My United States of America.” Blanco is a Colombian American artist now living in Orlando. Blanco’s show is the first exhibition in the new Segall Print Gallery, located in Butler North. Sept. 29-Dec. 1. Continuing: “Matthew Schreiber: Sauron, Bowie, and Maquettes.” Through Sept. 29. “Michael Naranjo: Hands On!” Through Sept. 29.


John Stark Edwards House. 303 Monroe St. NW, Warren 44483. 330-394-4653. trumbullcountyhistory.com…. Artifacts and furnishings from the Western Reserve. A lunchtime lecture series occurs the second Tuesday of the month.


Henry Barnhisel House. 1011 N. State St., Girard 44420. 330-545-6162. Artifacts from Girard and Trumbull County.

Museums & Galleries | Fall Preview 2024
Opening: ‘Together: A Portrait of Americans.’ Works by David Michael Salerno. Sept. 24-Oct. 17 at the Hoyt Institute of Fine Arts in New Castle, Pa. (Hoyt Institute of Fine Arts)

Hoyt Institute of Fine Arts. 124 E. Leasure Ave., New Castle 16101. 724-652-2882. hoytartcenter.org…. Offers permanent and changing exhibits. Opening: “Together: A Portrait of Americans.” Works by David Michael Salerno. Sept. 24Oct. 17. Continuing: “Our Storied Journey: “Oil Paintings by Laurie Hoen.” Works that combine still life and allegory to raise questions about social and environmental issues in America. Through Sept. 19. “Reflections.” Works by Yelena Kukharenko. Through Sept. 19.


Leavittsburg Heritage Museum. 4901 W. Market St., Leavittsburg 44430. 330-399-1448. Objects and artifacts from Leavittsburg’s past.


McDonough Museum of Art. 525 Wick Ave., Youngstown 44502. 330-941-1400. ysu.edu…. Art museum on the campus of Youngstown State University features changing exhibits, lectures, and musical performances. Museum is open 11 a.m.-4 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday. Opening: “Legacy: 58 Years of YSU Art.” Sept. 3-Oct. 26. An opening reception occurs 5-7 p.m., Friday, Sept. 6. “Fall 2024 Graduating BFA Exhibition.” Nov. 22-Dec. 14. An opening reception occurs 5-7 p.m., Friday, Nov. 22.

Museums & Galleries | Fall Preview 2024
‘The Still Point of the Turning World’ by Marietta artist Bobby Rosenstock. Currently on display through Oct. 5 at the Medici Museum of Art in Howland as part of the ‘Sequence’ exhibit. (Image courtesy of Bobby Rosenstock)

Medici Museum of Art. 9350 E. Market St., Warren 44484. 330-856-2120. medicimuseum.art. Offers a permanent collection, changing exhibits, and special programs. Continuing: “Sequence.” Works by Ohio artists who use printmaking as their primary medium of expression. Features work by Charles Beneke, Eliana Calle-Saari, Neil Daigle Orians, Arron Foster, J. Leigh Garcia, Terence Hammonds, David Leach, Ross Mazzupappa, Ellen Jean Price, Danielle Rante, Bobby Rosenstock, Art Werger, Rebekah Anne Wilhelm and Tara Yarzand. Curated by Christine D’Epiro Abbott. Through Oct. 5. “Norman Rockwell: American Scouting Collection.”


National Packard Museum. 1899 Mahoning Ave. NW, Warren 44483. 330-394-1899. packardmuseum.org…. Warren museum preserves the Packard legacy and recognizes the automaker’s influence in transportation and industrial history. “Arsenal of Democracy: Working at Packard During World War II.” Learn about Packard’s contribution to World War II. Presented by Charles Ohlin, director of education. Saturday, Sept. 7. “The Ghosts of Packards Passed.” 7 p.m., Friday, Oct. 25.


OH WOW! The Roger and Gloria Jones Children’s Center for Science and Technology. 15 Central Square, Youngstown 44503. 330-744-5914. ohwowkids.org…. Children’s museum offers interactive displays with a focus on science and technology. For children 5 to 14 and their families.


Judith Rae Solomon Gallery. 547 Wick Ave., One University Plaza, Youngstown 44503. 330-941-3105. Gallery is open 8 a.m.-5 p.m., Monday through Friday.


Springfield Township Historical Society Museum. 14118 Youngstown-Pittsburgh Road, Petersburg 44454. 330-340-4490. Preserves artifacts from New Middletown and Springfield Township’s past. Offers a lecture series the first Sunday from April through November.


Struthers Historical Society Museum. 50 Terrace, Struthers 44471. 330-755-7189. Features objects and artifacts from Struthers’ past.


Thomases Art Gallery. Jewish Community Center, 505 Gypsy Lane, Youngstown 44504. Art gallery in the Jewish Community Center displays work by regional artists. Continuing: “Prideful.” Works by Caryn Frishman. Through Sept. 30.


Trumbull Art Gallery. 158-162 N. Park Ave., Warren 44481. 330-395-4876. trumbullartgallery.com…. Displays works by local and regional artists.


Tyler History Center. 325 W. Federal St., Youngstown 44503. 330-743-2589. mahoninghistory.org…. “The People of the Mahoning Valley: Stories of Identity and Innovation.” Ongoing. “The Rayen Mural: Industry, Morality, Integrity.” Ongoing. Noon-4 p.m., Tuesday-Sunday.


War Vet Museum. 23 E. Main St., Canfield 44406. 330-533-6311. warvetmuseum.org…. houses artifacts from the American Revolution through the present day. Founded in 1988 by Lew & Joyce Speece. Lew Speece was a World War II Marine Corps veteran (6th Marines tank battalion) and the commander of the American Legion Post 177 from 1980 to 2013.


Weller Gallery. Fellows Riverside Gardens, Mill Creek MetroParks, 123 McKinley Ave., Youngstown 44509. 330-740-7116. www.mil…. Gallery at Fellows Riverside Gardens offers changing exhibits. Opening: “Painted Memories.” Features work by local artist Beth Basista. Includes more than 40 paintings in oils, acrylics and watercolors that capture landscapes found throughout Mill Creek MetroParks. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Tuesday-Sunday. Sept. 1-Oct. 16.


Youngstown Historical Center of Industry and Labor. 151 Wood St., Youngstown 44503. 330-941-1314. The museum preserves and interprets the industrial and labor history of the Mahoning Valley. Includes permanent installations, changing exhibits, artwork, photographs, artifacts and an archive.

Opening: ‘GLOW: Neon and Light.’ Pictured: Ivan Navarro’s ‘Bomb Bomb Bomb.’ Opens Sept. 21 at the Akron Art Museum. (Akron Art Museum)
AKRON-CANTON

Akron Art Museum. 1 S. High St., Akron 44308. 330-376-9185. akronartmuseum.org…. Opening: “GLOW: Neon and Light.” Exhibition using glass, neon, mirrors and light bulbs in sculptural installations. Sept. 21-Feb. 9, 2025. Continuing: “Where We Live: Photographs in Human Spaces.” Through Dec. 29. “Zeerak Ahmed: Mother, I Am Compelled To Leave اماّں میں تو پاہونی.” This sound and video installation captures a culture disrupted by the 1947 partitioning of the Indian subcontinent. Through Dec. 29.


Pro Football Hall of Fame. 2121 George Halas Drive, Canton 44708. 330-456-8207. profootballhof.com…. Sports museum chronicles, interprets, and celebrates the history of professional football.

Museums & Galleries | Fall Preview 2024
Detail from Rose B. Simpson’s ‘Strata,’ one of two monumental figurative sculptures commissioned specifically for the Cleveland Museum of Art’s atrium. On display through April 13, 2025. (Image courtesy of the Cleveland Museum of Art)
CLEVELAND

Cleveland Botanical Garden. 11030 East Blvd., Cleveland 44106. 216-721-1600. cbgarden.org…. Features changing indoor and outdoor gardens, including a rainforest and a desert.


Cleveland Museum of Art. 11150 East Blvd., Cleveland 44106. 216-421-7350. clevelandart.org…. Continuing: “Into the Seven Jeweled Mountain: An Immersive Experience.” Through Sept. 29. “From Dreaming to Hiking: Korean Landscape Paintings.” Through Sept. 29. “Korean Couture: Generations of Revolution.” Through Oct. 13. “Ancient Andean Textiles.” Through Dec. 8. “Picturing the Border.” Through Jan. 5, 2025. “Rose B. Simpson: Strata.” Through April 13, 2025.


Cleveland Museum of Natural History.1 Wade Oval Drive, Cleveland 44106. 1-800-317-9155. cmnh.org…. Permanent and changing exhibits covering anthropology, archaeology, botany, geology, paleontology, and wildlife biology. Continuing: “Discovering Dunkleosteus Terrelli.” Well-preserved fossils of the predatory fish that once inhabited Ohio’s ancient sea. Through Nov. 24. “Celebrating Lucy.” Marks the 50th anniversary of the discovery of “Lucy,” the oldest and most complete hominin skeleton known at the time. The skeleton was unearthed by Cleveland Museum of Natural History curator Dr. Donald Johanson in Ethiopia. Through Nov. 24. “Birdly.” Immersive simulator replicates the flight of winged creatures ranging from pterosaurs to birds. Through Dec. 31.


Great Lakes Science Center. 601 Erieside Ave., Cleveland 44114. 216-694-2000. greatscience.com…. Offers interactive exhibits focusing on science, technology and space. The NASA Glenn Visitor Center offers space-related galleries, NASA media and artifacts (including moon rocks) and exhibits. Artifacts include the Apollo Command Module, which traveled 26.5 million miles in space. In the Cleveland Creates Gallery: interactive exhibits that cover technology, remote robotics, sensors and data. Continuing: “Space: The New Frontier.” Film explores the future of space travel. “TapeScape: International Tape Station.” The immersive exhibit’s focal point is a play-scape crafted from packing tape. “Steamship William G. Mather” Tour a restored, working, 618-foot Great Lakes freighter. “Move It.” Interactive machine exhibits developed by Adam Ward, a Los Angeles-based LEGO expert. “Biomedtech.” Interactive displays focusing on stem cells, functional-electrical stimulation, prosthetics and medical imaging. Ongoing.


Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland. 14000 Euclid, Cleveland 48106. 216-421-8671. mocacleveland.org…. Contemporary art and installations. Continuing: “Message from Our Planet.” Digital art from the Thoma Collection. Through Dec 29. Ruben Ulises Rodriguez Montoya: Skinchangers: Begotten of my Flesh.” Through Dec. 29. “A PLACE meant.” Considers how Cleveland can apply design solutions to address affordable housing challenges. Co-created with Lutheran Metropolitan Ministry. Through Dec. 29.


Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Union Home Mortgage Plaza, 1100 Rock and Roll Blvd., Cleveland, 44114. 216-781-7625. rockhall.com…. Exhibits chronicle the history and development of rock and roll. Also hosts topical programs.

Through Jan. 26, 2025 at the Carnegie Museum of Art. Installation view of ’Pittsburgh Satellite Reef,’ part of the worldwide ‘Crochet Coral Reef Project’ by Christine and Margaret Wertheim and the Institute for Figuring, Carnegie Museum of Art. (Photo by Sean Eaton. Courtesy of the Carnegie Museum of Art)
PITTSBURGH

The Andy Warhol Museum. 117 Sandusky St., Pittsburgh. 412-237-8300. warhol.org…. Exhibits Andy Warhol’s paintings, sculptures, prints, photographs, commercial illustrations, and pop art by other artists. Continuing: “KAWS + Warhol.” Through Jan. 20. “Altered States.” Ongoing.


Carnegie Museum of Art. 4400 Forbes Ave., Pittsburgh 15213. 412-622-3131. cmoa.org…. Includes painting, sculpture, prints, photographs, decorative arts, design, video and digital images. Continuing: “Marie Watt: Land Stitches Water Sky.” Through Sept. 22. “Beate Kuhn: Turn.” Through Dec. 1. “Widening the Lens: Photography, Ecology, and the Contemporary Landscape.” Through Jan. 12, 2025. “Pittsburgh Satellite Reef.” Through Jan. 26, 2025.


Carnegie Museum of Natural History. 4400 Forbes Ave., Pittsburgh 15213. 412-622-3131. carnegiemnh.org…. Features the world’s natural history from prehistoric times to the present. Continuing: “The Stories We Keep: Conserving Objects from Ancient Egypt.” Though March 9. “Spotlight on Science.” Examines different aspects of life on Earth. Covers the past, present and future. “Cretaceous Seaway.” A display of creatures that lived underwater during the dinosaur age. “Dinosaurs in their Time.” Features dozens of fossils from throughout the Mesozoic Era displayed in reconstructions of their ancient habitats. “From Egypt to Pittsburgh.” A rotating object display that traces an artifact’s history from ancient Egypt to the Carnegie Museum. “Hillman Hall of Minerals and Gems.” Features over 1,300 specimens from all other the world. “Benedum Hall of Geology.” Ongoing.


Carnegie Science Center. One Allegheny Ave., Pittsburgh 15212. 412-237-3400. carnegiesciencecenter.org…. Features interactive programs in science and technology. All ages. “The Science Behind Pixar.” Special exhibit that explores all the major Pixar characters. “Mars: The Next Giant Leap.” Features a 300-million-mile journey to Mars where participants learn about different aspects of space exploration. “Skywatch.” Explore the night skies in regular programs at the Buhl Planetarium and Observatory. “Robot Hall of Fame.” Explores the fictional robots that preceded the actual robots that followed.


Heinz Pittsburgh Regional History Center. 1212 Smallman St., Pittsburgh 15222. 412-454-6000. heinzhistorycenter.org…. Preserves and interprets the history of Western Pennsylvania with interactive exhibits and displays. Includes the Heinz History Center, the Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum, the Fort Pitt Museum and the Meadowcroft Rockshelter and Historic Village.

The Great Lakes Science Center offers tours of the steamship William G. Mather, a restored, working, 618-foot Great Lakes freighter. The steamship offers insight into the era of industrial shipping on the Great Lakes. (Great Lakes Science Center)

Films on Art


Tuesdays Film on Art. Butler Institute of American Art. 524 Wick Ave., Youngstown 44502. 330-743-1711. butlerart.com…. Films occur at Zona Auditorium in the museum’s Beecher Center. Coming in September: “Milton Glaser: To Inform and Delight.” (1 hour, 13 minutes). The portrait of an artist celebrated for his gifts in graphic design. Noon, Tuesday, Sept. 3. “Civilizations: The Cult of Progress” (55 minutes). Noon, Tuesday, Sept. 10. “Nam June Paik: Moon is the Oldest TV Part 1.” (55 minutes). A chronicle of the life of a pillar of the avant-garde in the 20th century. Noon, Tuesday, Sept. 17.


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