Exhibits
- A new exhibition in the Earth Sciences & Map Library shares the work of two local artists and a selection of maps curated by a CU Boulder doctoral candidate exploring the meaning of “topophilia.”
- A new CU Art Museum exhibit highlights how art meets challenging times and finds the sometimes-elusive silver lining. With an opening celebration on Sept. 12, the exhibit runs through Oct. 26 and then reopens in February 2025.
- Three undergraduate fellows in the University Libraries have curated exhibits using materials from Rare and Distinctive Collections.
- The “Treating Damaged Book Spines” exhibit will run through the summer in Norlin M350B and demonstrate a step-by-step process for mending spines.
- The Ann Roy papers are held in the University Libraries Rare and Distinctive Collections and contain the work of Tulsa-born poet, mystic and political activist Ann Roy.
- Find yourself in the cosmos, transported by art created in conversation with scientists and engineers at LASP and with the help of local school groups. Join special programs Feb. 24 and March 9.
- A new exhibition at the CU Art Museum through July 13 was created by socially engaged artists-in-residence to honor Black girls and women.
- The fifth installment of the Embodied Judaism exhibit series, “Know Your Nosh: Food, Jewishness & Identity,” now on view at the Norlin Library, explores the significance of food and agriculture for Jewish religious, cultural, national and political identities.
- “We CU: A Visual Celebration of Black Womanhood, Presence, and Connectedness” is an exhibit curated by Charlie Billingsley and Von Ross, the CU Art Museum and University Libraries’ socially engaged artists-in-residence.
- A full-scale skeletal reconstruction of a Triceratops—cast from the bones of several partial specimens found in the late 1800s—is now on display at CU Boulder's East Campus.