Venues

Krannert Art Museum

Krannert Art Museum 500 East Peabody Drive, Champaign, IL, United States

Krannert Art Museum invites the public to celebrate Boneyard Arts Festival with us by visiting art on display, including featured solo exhibition, Could You Dim the Lights? by Jen Everett; the annual MFA Exhibition; and the ARTSPEAK Teen Art Exhibition. View works in our permanent galleries Art Since 1948, a selection of American and European art from the Trees Collection,

Phillips Recreation Center

Phillips Recreation Center 505 W Stoughton, Urbana, IL, United States

Nature in (Mostly) Micro by Tyson Kruse Meet the Photographer: April 12, 5-5:45pm Artist Workshop: April 12, 5:45-6:30pm This show focuses on the small things in nature that are easily overlooked in our day to day lives. The show will feature macro photos, but it will include some (slightly) larger subjects. The location for the photos in this show are

Anita Purves Nature Center

Anita Purves Nature Center 1505 N Broadway, Urbana, IL, United States

"Collections of an Unseen World", Multimedia including digital, watercolor, gouache, pencil and ink Jeremy Cagle's "Collections of an Unseen World" art show is on display in the nature center's education wing. Visitors can also enjoy the nature center's Field Station hands-on exhibit hall, Wildlife Observation Room, and Nature Store gift shop where items from other local artists are for sale.

Springer Cultural Center

Springer Cultural Center 301 N Randolph Street, Champaign, IL, United States

Town & Country Amateur Art Show Part of the fun of making art is displaying it. Budding artists and art enthusiasts alike have their work featured in this local amateur show. There will be a recorded critique by the juror on the last day of the show. The juror will discuss the art, point out good technique, and offer helpful

Spurlock Museum

Spurlock Museum 600 South Gregory, Urbana, IL, United States

Juxtapositioned III by Durango Mendoza Durango Mendoza (1945–2020) was an artist, photographer, and published writer of short stories and poetry. He was a resident of Illinois for about 50 years—first in Chicago, then Oak Park, then Urbana. Featuring photography, mixed media, and wooden sculpture. Durango's ideas about Indigenous identity are interwoven—juxtaposed—with his relationship with the world around him, reaching back