Thursday, January 30, 2025

#GoAllOut with these Top Art Exhibitions in Columbus, Georgia this Spring!

2025 is here, and with it comes an exciting lineup of art exhibitions in Columbus, Georgia! Whether you're a long-time art lover or just looking to explore something new, Columbus’ vibrant arts scene has something for everyone. From newly-created works to timeless classics on loan from the MoMA, here are four must-see exhibitions this Spring. It’s time to #GoAllOut!

 

One: Women of the Pacific Northwest at The Bo Bartlett Center,  January 18 - April 26

 

This exhibition highlights female artists whose work is rooted in material exploration within the tradition of Northwest influences and how environment shapes visual vocabularies and concepts. The exhibition, curated by Betsy Eby, challenges the way the viewer sees and experiences art by featuring works rooted by fellow female artists from Eby's native region of the Pacific Northwest. The artist panel discussion for this exhibition will take place on February 5th at 5:30PM with a public opening reception following immediately at 6:30PM.

 

Two: Infinite Poem: Jewish Placemaking in the Deep South | Photographs by Emily Williams at The Do Good Fund Gallery

 

This exhibition of photographs and oral histories is an exploration of identity and place - both literal and metaphorical - in small Jewish communities in the Deep South. Faced simultaneously with antisemitism and both pressure and opportunity to assimilate into whiteness, this work seeks to understand how Jewish communities have preserved traditions while forging their own unique identity in places that are often perceived differently.

Emily Williams is a Pennsylvania-based artist investigating communal and individual memory, identity and placemaking through photography and oral history interviews. She holds a BA in fine arts and history from Haverford College and an MFA in photography from Louisiana State University. Her work has been supported by the Southern Jewish Historical Society, Texas Jewish Historical Society and Alabama Folklife Association. 

 

Three: *Art Bridges Partner Network: American Art from the 1920s and 1930s at The Columbus Museum, Now through September 14, 2025

*Generously lent by The Museum of Modern Art, New York as part of the Art Bridges Collection Loan Partnership.

 

The Columbus Museum was selected as a participant in the Art Bridges Partner Loan Network program with seven unique loans of American art from the 1920s and 1930s. The sculpture and six paintings are owned by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York. Art Bridges, based in Bentonville, Arkansas, exists to expand access to American art and to inspire institutions to open their vaults and share important works. The organization covers costs for packing and shipping as well as for educational programs centered around the borrowed objects.

For this generous year-long loan, The Columbus Museum has incorporated the pieces on loan from MoMA into the permanent collection galleries. Visitors have the opportunity to discover new works by familiar artists like Milton Avery and Stuart Davis. Fresh visual juxtapositions with “conversation partners” in the galleries have been designed to offer new insights and interpretations for old favorites at the Museum. Want more? Another group of loans from MoMA and Art Bridges will debut at the Museum this summer! Stay tuned for more information and in the meantime, don't miss an opportunity to see these rare pieces from MoMA in person.

 

Four: Eye of the Blackbird at The Bo Bartlett Center,  January 18 - April 26

 

Inspired by the Wallace Stevens poem, Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird, this exhibition is dedicated to artists for whom looking is inseparable from thinking. In each case, the eye is an agile organ capable of enabling both intellectual depth and emotional precision. The public opening reception will occur on February 5th at 6:30pm.

 

Five: Didi Dunphy: Trip the Light Fantastic Exhibition

 

 

This exhibition features Athens-based artist Didi Dunphy's newest works. Rooted in minimalism, yet brimming with color and whimsy, Dunphy's art bridges the conceptual and the tangible.

No matter your artistic tastes, Columbus offers a rich and diverse array of exhibitions this spring that are sure to inspire and captivate. So, grab your calendar, plan your visit, and come experience the creative energy that makes Columbus a must-visit destination for art lovers this season!

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