December Events, Important Dates, and Openings

UPCOMING EVENTS

Left: Linda Lighton, Nude Descending a Staircase, 2007, glazed earthenware with china paint and luster, 18 x 11 ½ x 5 ½ in. Collection Shook, Hardy, & Bacon L.L.P. Right: Linda Lighton, Tinkerbelle, 2007, glazed earthenware with china paint and luster, 14 ½ x 13 x 12 in. Courtesy the Artist

Linda Lighton: Love & War, A Fifty-Year Survey, 1975-2025 brings with it two opportunities!

  • Education Preview Day • Linda Lighton: Love & War
    Thursday, December 11 • 4-6 PM • Free – Space is limited; RSVP required

We’ll also discuss updates to what’s on view, both in our permanent collection and temporary exhibition spaces, Nerman Museum resources available to educators, and other types of educational opportunities that can be created for your students right here at the Nerman Museum! This preview is one hour long, and educators will be able to select their timeslot – either 4-5 PM or 5-6 PM – upon registration.

  • Linda Lighton Artist Talk and Opening Reception
    Friday, December 12 • Artist talk: 6-7 PM • Reception: 7-9 PM
    FREE and Open to the Public • Artist talk livestream available

Join us for an artist talk with Linda Lighton at our Hudson Auditorium, celebrating the opening of the Linda Lighton: Love & War, A Fifty-Year Survey, 1975-2025. A reception in the Museum’s atrium will follow the talk. The artist talk will be available via livestream. RSVP to receive the livestream link.

A living room setting with different patterned couches, a blue coffee table, and a flower printed wallpaper.

Amy Kligman: The Salon for Possible Futures

The Salon‘s calendar of events continues with a Collective Imagining Circle: 2026 on Saturday, December 13 from 1-2:30 PM. This event is free, but space is limited and RSVP  is required.

UPCOMING EXHIBITIONS

Angeline Rivas, Charm and Strange (detail), 2024, acrylic, gouache, and graphite on panel, 60 x 48 in. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, KS, Acquired with funds provided by the Barton P. and Mary D. Cohen Art Acquisition Endowment at the JCCC Foundation. Photo: Chris Sharp Gallery

Angeline Rivas: I Had a Dark Night of the Soul and All I Got Was This Lousy T-Shirt
On view December 13, 2025 through May 3, 2026
Kansas Focus Gallery, First Floor

The Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art is proud to host Angeline Rivas’s first institutional solo exhibition. Painted with airbrush on wood panel and canvas, the works of Angeline Rivas are vast, yet compact crucibles of a unique form of western Americana. Unlike typical airbrush paintings, Rivas’s works have a way of disclosing, as opposed to effacing, facture via imperfections, pieces of tape, and small moments of graffiti, making it such that the work has carved out a singular space for itself both on a formal and a conceptual level. Rivas (b. 1981) was born and raised in Kansas City, MO and is now based in Los Angeles, CA. Rivas earned her MFA in 2022 from the ArtCenter College of Design, Pasadena, CA and her BFA in 2005 from Otis College of Art and Design, Los Angeles, CA.

Michael Brantley, The First Lady of Song, c. 2012, oil on canvas, 50 x 52 x 2 in. Courtesy the Artist

Visionary: The Work of Michael Brantley
On view December 13, 2025 through May 3, 2026
McCaffree Gallery, Second Floor

Guest curated by artist Harold Smith, Visionary, Brantley’s first institutional solo exhibition, will feature the elegant and sophisticated work of painter Michael Brantley, a master painter whose stunning work and practice compellingly encapsulates the love, fears, hopes, and dreams within the Black experience. Michael Brantley (b. 1970) is a multi-disciplinary figurative artist living and working in Kansas City, Missouri. Using oil paint as his preferred medium, his work reflects and celebrates the lifestyle, heritage, and culture of American Africans. Brantley’s art inspires, informs, and provokes dialogue. His large-scale monochromatic paintings in the jazz aesthetic have been spotlighted by the NFL and exhibited at the American Jazz Museum and at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.

UPCOMING CLOSURES

Special closures: Café Tempo will be closed Dec. 10 for a special event and Dec. 13, 2025-Jan. 19, 2026 for JCCC’s Winter Break. The Nerman Museum will be closed Dec. 24, 2025-Jan. 5, 2026 for JCCC’s Winter Break.

Visionary: The Work of Michael Brantley

Visionary: The Work of Michael Brantley

December 13, 2025 through May 3, 2026

Exhibition Catalogue by Harold Smith (PDF)

On the art of Michael Brantley —  by guest curator Harold Smith, artist, curator, educator, and writer

“Where there is no vision, there is no hope.” – George Washington Carver

My first visit with Michael A. Brantley was in the cavernous basement of the former Pressman Studios in Kansas City, Kansas.  From 1927 to the mid-2000s, this basement housed the printing presses for the once-daily but now online-only Kansas City Kansan newspaper. When the Kansan ceased physical publication, the basement was converted to artist studios. At one point, it housed multiple working artists, each with their own space. Now all the artists were are long gone, except Michael Brantley.

As the space is vast (the Kansan once had a circulation of 34,000), the temptation of many artists would have been to just spread out supplies and projects, since there is so much room to work with and no one else to consider. However, one look, and the intentionality of Brantley, its sole inhabitant, is evident. The entire space is neatly organized, with works in progress strategically placed so that Brantley could focus on each one without visual distraction from the others.

Michael’s office is a compact, somewhat dimly lit yet cozy and inviting space that made me think of the smoky backroom of a speakeasy where the aroma of bourbon is in the air and clouds of cigar smoke hover over clandestine poker games. It was here where Brantley first opened up and peeled back some of the layers of his complex and winding journey to this moment.

We talked for about an hour about his backstory, his education, his influences, and what the work of Michael Brantley is truly about. I left that first meeting with a clear understanding of his work, born of struggle and triumph, synthesizing tradition, realism, and the Black experience.

Brantley’s masterful oil paintings stand as a bridge linking the past and the present, ascending from deep roots in Western art traditionalism and spreading its branches wide to incorporate the lived realities of today’s Black Americans. His duotone photorealistic style synthesizes the intensity of jazz, the struggles and dignity of living while Black, and the complex social dynamics of a community still negotiating what it means to be Black in America. His velvety paintings explode from the collision of classical technique and the contemporary Black experience.

A native of Kansas City who spent time in Detroit, Brantley is best known for his lush renditions of Black jazz musicians. His work has been featured by the NFL, and he has exhibited at the American Jazz Museum, the Nelson-Atkins Museum, The Zhou Brothers Art Center, and now the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art.

Brantley’s career trajectory has been somewhat delayed but not denied by profound personal adversity. In 2015, coming off a breakthrough exhibition at the American Jazz Museum, Brantley was diagnosed with sarcoidosis, a chronic inflammatory disease. Navigating the precarious waters of the Affordable Care Act to secure treatment was a challenge that soon followed. Yet, ten years later, Brantley paints daily with the same dedication and purpose, a testament to his personal courage and creative endurance.

Brantley is a longtime member of the African American Artists Collective in Kansas City, a respected organization empowering Black voices in the Midwest art scene. It was through this membership that Brantley’s work was exhibited at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art as part of the Testimony: African American Artists Collective exhibition in 2021. An artist with deep roots in Kansas City’s Black community, Brantley grounds his artistic practice in his commitment to his community, ethnic heritage, cultural history, and Black artistic tradition.

The African American Artists Collective in 2021, Photo: Jim Barcus, Courtesy of KC Studio Magazine

One of the most impressive aspects of Brantley’s work is that, despite being primarily self-taught, his work reflects a striking adherence to traditional realism. This alone is a testament to the veracity of his artistic practice. A skill set such as Brantley’s is only developed through years of focus, practice, and dedication to perfection. Anatomical precision, exemplary composition, virtuosic use of light, and sophisticated shading speak to an artist who has practiced long and hard at his craft, holding himself to the highest of painterly standards. Brantley’s Caravaggesque ability to utilize light and darkness to dramatize, isolate, and elevate his subjects distinguishes his work from much of today’s contemporary painting while his somewhat understated visual ambiance brings to mind the sense of timelessness observed in the works of Rembrandt, Vermeer, and Goya.

A serious craftsman with unwavering painterly conviction, Brantley wields the tools of tradition with precision and intention for the purpose of elevating Black subjects that were minimized and marginalized within those same traditions. Like Michelangelo using mallets and chisels to liberate forms from marble, Brantley uses the tools of Western art traditionalism to liberate and uplift the Black subject from the social-historical constraints inherent in the canon of Western art.

It is no surprise, therefore, that Brantley cites Henry Ossawa Tanner as an influence. Born free in 1859, the son of a future African Methodist Episcopal Church bishop, Tanner expatriated to France in 1891 and became the first Black American painter to gain international acclaim. Possibly the first known painting by a Black American to realistically depict other Black Americans, Tanner’s Banjo Lesson (1893) utilized realism to present the Black lived experience in a way that challenged the commonly held stereotypes of the time. Brantley, likewise, uses realism to confront and challenge the stereotypes of our time as seen in Figures of Speech (2024).

Michael A. Brantley, Figures of Speech, 2024, oil on canvas, Image courtesy the Artist

Henry Ossawa Tanner, The Banjo Lesson, 1893, Hampton University Museum, Gift to museum by Robert C. Ogden

Brantley’s usage of traditional painting techniques to express contemporary Blackness effectively captures the emotionally charged history of Black artistic resistance in a bottle. By using techniques of the Old Masters to immortalize Black musicians and activists, Brantley’s work becomes the physical embodiment of Charles White’s 1940 declaration that “paint is the only weapon I have with which to fight what I resent.”

While Caravaggio used chiaroscuro to dramatize Christian martyrs, Brantley uses it to dramatize the juxtaposition of the Black lived experience against the backdrop of the Black American experience. In that sense, like Caravaggio, Brantley uses realism and tenebrism to transform the martyred, both literally and symbolically, into heroic figures.

This transformation is evident in I Am A Man (2018), where Brantley uses chiaroscuro to triumphantly crown the subject with the phrase “I Am A Man.” Rooted in the 1968 Memphis sanitation workers strike, this phrase is now synonymous with the demand for civil rights, dignity, and equal treatment. Powerfully simple, it speaks to Black self-affirmation rising like a phoenix from the smoldering ashes of cultural subjugation.

Taken during a Civil Rights protest, Richard L. Copley’s famed 1968 photograph contextualizes “I Am A Man” as an external declaration, publicly asserting one’s inherent human dignity and demand for respect as such. Twenty years later, Glenn Ligon’s 1988 rendition isolates the phrase, allowing the viewer to interpret it based on their own internal experiences.

Thirty years later, Brantley’s presentation of “I Am A Man” as a chorus of affirmative declarations exuding like afro picks from the hair of an aged Black man grasping chains resonates like a choral response to “I am an invisible man,” the opening sentence from Ralph Ellison’s seminal novel Invisible Man. His portrayal of the phrase contextualizes it as an internal declaration, one that exists in and of itself, regardless of public response.

Richard L. Copley, I am a man, 1968, Photographic print

Glenn Ligon, Untitled (I Am a Man), 1988, Oil and enamel on canvas 40 x 25 inches (101.6 x 63.5 cm), National Gallery of Art

Michael A. Brantley, I AM A MAN, 2018, oil on canvas, Image courtesy the Artist

While Brantley wields traditionalism with the exactness of a surgeon’s scalpel, removing the cancers of stereotype and caricature from the canon of Western imagery, his aesthetic ideology stems from the self-determination of Alain Locke and the New Negro philosophy which fueled the Harlem Renaissance. Brantley’s work faithfully picks up the mantle from Locke’s 1925 declaration that, “art must discover and reveal the beauty which prejudice and caricature have overlaid.” In A Seat at the Table and I Am A Man, Brantley utilizes allegory to position Black subjects as heroic figures, analogous to Harlem Renaissance painter Aaron Douglas in The Creation (1927), Judgment Day (1927), and The Negro in an African Setting (1934). When one considers the synthesis of traditionalism and New Negro/Harlem Renaissance aesthetic ideology, it is inevitable that A Seat at the Table and I Am A Man lie firmly within the canon of Black American Social Realism, echoing tenets found in the work of Augusta Savage, Jacob Lawrence, Hale Woodruff, and others.

In A Seat at the Table, Brantley portrays his subjects with natural hairstyles while dressed as domestic servants, visually manifesting Locke’s assertion that art reveals “the beauty which prejudice and caricature have overlaid.” The primary subject’s mouth is taped shut, symbolically silencing his physical voice. Yet, the voice of his humanity is heard through his natural hairstyle. These notions of heroism in the midst of oppression echo those found in the works by Aaron Douglas such as Harriet Tubman (1931).

Michael A. Brantley, A Seat at the Table, 2021, oil on canvas, Collection of John and Sharon Hoffman, Image courtesy the Artist

Aaron Douglas (1899-1979), Harriet Tubman, 1931, oil on canvas, © Heirs of Aaron Douglas / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY

Brantley’s work is imbued with intricate detail reflective of the photorealism found in the paintings of contemporary Black painters such as Amy Sherald, Kehinde Wiley, and the late Barkley Hendricks. However, Brantley’s emotionally charged references to social injustice differentiates his work from theirs and places it in a category of its own. Hendricks’s North Philly Niggah (William Corbett) (1975) and Brantley’s The First Lady of Song (2012), a rendition of jazz icon Ella Fitzgerald, both utilize a sense of photorealistic detail in portraying their subjects, yet Brantley’s heightened sense of emotion, from the pained facial expression to the singular drop of sweat streaking down the subject’s face, evokes a different, possibly more intimate and visceral response.

Barkley L. Hendricks, North Philly Niggah (William Corbett), 1975, oil and acrylic on canvas, 182.9 x 121.9 cm (detail). Photo © Sotheby’s

Michael A. Brantley, The First Lady of Song, 2012, oil on canvas, Image courtesy the Artist

By painting jazz icons in works such as The First Lady of Song, The Cornet (2025), and Yardbird (2025), Brantley speaks to their centrality, and that of the arts in general, to Black cultural and social identity. By making the humanity of these musicians the focus of the image, Brantley positions the Black jazz musicians as living embodiments of the Black contemporary struggle. He does not emphasize their humanity to the detriment of their artistry but rather affirms that Black artistry and Black humanity are inseparable. In Brantley’s work, Black humanity and Black artistry are analogous to light and heat; they may be separate qualities, but you cannot have one without the other.

Michael A. Brantley, Yardbird, 2025, oil on canvas, Image courtesy the Artist

In The Soloist (Trumpette) (2024), a painting of a seemingly exhausted or reflective woman trumpet player, Brantley departs from his normal duotone palette, utilizing soft crimsons and browns. This grounded position of the subject speaks to the connection between vulnerability and the power of the vulnerable, an uneasy relationship shared by the dispossessed. An emotional weightiness exudes from the image, as in most of Brantley’s work. The departure from a duotone palette shifts the emotional weight from the subject to the entire image itself.

Michael A. Brantley, The Soloist (Trumpette), 2024, oil on canvas, Image courtesy the Artist

Michael A. Brantley’s work synthesizes Western painting traditionalism and the contemporary Black experience. Ideologically speaking, he is firmly planted in the ideas guiding the Harlem Renaissance, Social Realism, and the Black Arts Movement. By portraying both the famous and the unknown, the easily recognizable and the nameless, Brantley affirms the shared experience of Black Americans.

Brantley’s paintings remind us that artistic tradition is not written in stone. It is changeable and continually evolving. In his work, prior traditions become tools for creating new expressions that not only articulate the Black experience but speak to the shared human experience itself.

The work of Michael A. Brantley is both for this time and also timeless. His work honors the past, paying homage to both cultural and artistic traditions, while speaking to power in the present.

References

Locke, Alain. The New Negro. New York: Albert and Charles Boni, 1925.

White, Charles. Interview in Art Digest, 1940 in The Journal of Pan African Studies, vol.3, no.4, December 2009, https://www.jpanafrican.org/docs/vol3no4/3.4CharlesWhitebyPaul.pdf

Ellison, Ralph. Invisible Man. London: Penguin Books, 2014.

Michael A. Brantley, Love Still Remains, Oil on canvas with acrylic flakes mounted on wood, 2025

Michael A. Brantley, Say Whaat? (The Tea), 2025, acrylic and oil on canvas, Image courtesy the Artist

Michael Brantley in his studio

Digital Collection Catalog – Scenario Questions

Wondering how to get students acquainted with research catalogs? The Nerman Museum staff has compiled prompts to help those new to our digital permanent collection catalog platform get acquainted with the various types of search and filter options!

Using Advanced Search:
How many pieces of turquoise jewelry are on display in the library?

Using “Browse by Featured Collection” and filter side bar:
How many pieces in the Oppenheimer Collection are also part of the Native American Collection?

Using Advanced Search:
How many pieces in the collection have glitter?

Using the simple search bar:
Is your favorite piece on view?  If so, where can one find it on campus?

Answer Key | Learn more about our resources

November Events and Important Dates

Living room setting with various people within it

The Nerman Museum continues its The Salon for Possible Futures programming in November with a Nov. 20 Storytelling Night from 6-8 PM with poet Glenn North.

THANKSGIVING BREAK:

The Nerman Museum will be closed Wednesday, Nov. 26, through Sunday, Nov. 30 for JCCC’s Thanksgiving break. Café Tempo will be closed for that same time frame, as well as Tuesday, Nov. 25.

Digital Permanent Collection Catalog and other resources

Our wonderful Registration team has launched the first iteration of our Digital Permanent Collection Catalog – a searchable resource that contains the full listing of all works in our collection, including information on what’s on view across campus. With this addition, we now have a robust set of resources, allowing educators, students, and community members to easily find information related to our artwork. Here’s a quick run down on all available digital tools:

MUSEUM WEBSITE

  • Audience: general public, community, donors
  • Purpose: context of collection, awareness, entry point to other platforms
  • Tone: polished and formal
  • Content: photos, highlights, event calendar
  • Features: serves as museum’s umbrella platform, minimal design

DIGITAL COLLECTION CATALOG

  • Audience: researchers, academics, public
  • Purpose: searchable complete collection for academic research, provides encyclopedic information
  • Tone: formal, reference
  • Content: permanent collection database entries, gallery label texts, location data
  • Features: web and mobile-friendly

DIGITAL GUIDE

  • Audience: museum visitors
  • Purpose: curated guide for exhibitions and collections, wayfinding
  • Tone: informative, accessible
  • Content: audio/video, maps, location-based info, museum-produced content
  • Features: accessible through mobile app or web browser

EDUCATION BLOG

  • Audience: educators, docents, faculty
  • Purpose: provided educator resources, event, artist, and temporary exhibition information
  • Tone: informal, not comprehensive
  • Content: links, short articles
  • Features: focused on collection, exhibitions, and events

YOUTUBE

  • Audience: general public, college community
  • Purpose: share educational video content, highlight collaborations
  • Tone: formal
  • Content: video recordings of lectures, artist talks
  • Features: Hosted on JCCC Video account

SOCIAL MEDIA (such as Instagram and Facebook)

  • Audience: general public, online community
  • Purpose: Build awareness, engage audience, reflect personality
  • Tone: Informal, spontaneous
  • Content: images, short videos, user-generated content
  • Features: engages with trends and cultural zeitgeist

Find these resources and more online at linktr.ee/nermanmuseum

If you have any feedback about these tools, please share it with us!

Chart of the various artwork resources for the Nerman Museum

Need this information in a printable format? Download our Nerman Museum Digital Tools Guide (.pdf).

 

Young Artists Retreat – 2023 and 2024 Videos

Our 2025 Young Artists Retreat was a resounding success! Videos from this year’s speakers will be available soon, but in the meantime, we’d like to share past videos! You can also watch these on YouTube on our Young Artists Retreat YouTube playlist.

2023

Keynote Speaker: Rashawn Griffin

2024

Keynote Speaker: Whitney Manney

Session Speakers:

Megan Levens

JT Daniels

Angie and Michelle Dreher – TwoTone Press

2025 Young Artists Retreat Speakers Confirmed

Speakers have been confirmed for the 2025 Young Artists Retreat, occurring on Friday, October 25!

For those unable to attend in person, we will have a livestream available as well. Register for the livestream by Tuesday, Oct. 22!

LIVESTREAM AGENDA (times listed in CST):

  • 9:10 AM-10: Session Speakers
    • SunYoung Park or Joy Rhodes
  • 10:10-11 AM: Professional Development Session with Harold Smith
  • 11:10 AM-noon: Session Speakers
    • Christopher Erazo or Matthew Willie Garcia
  • 1 PM: Keynote Speaker, Amy Kligman

All sessions will be recorded and available after the livestream airs.

KEYNOTE SPEAKER

Brunette woman with shoulder length hair

Amy Kligman

Amy Kligman, artist and organizer of The Salon for Possible Futures, which is on view in the Nerman Museum, will be the Keynote Speaker for the Young Artists Retreat program. The Salon for Possible Futures is an interactive space for community gathering and collective imagining. Themes of fostering humanity and relationships, learning from the past, and building sustainability, hope, and magic are the underpinnings of The Salon’s assembled objects and imagery. Amy Kligman was the Executive Artistic Director at Charlotte Street 2015-2025. Kligman’s career and experience as an exhibiting artist and grassroots curator/arts administrator spans 20 years of studio & exhibition work, independent curating and organizing, and artist-run projects.

PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT SPEAKER

Man with a beard wearing a dark shirt

Harold Smith

Harold Smith is a Kansas City-based visual artist whose internationally exhibited and collected work includes painting, collage, mixed media, performance, video, sound, and assemblage. His work focuses on the complexity of black masculinity in America. He also writes for KC Studio magazine. Smith was an educator in Kansas City for 30 years, teaching computer science and other computer classes, and later coding and game design, at Kansas City’s Manual Career & Technical Center. Before retiring from teaching in 2021, Smith taught art at Lincoln College Preparatory Middle School for two and a half years. He received a Charlotte Street Visual Arts Award and a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant in 2022. He was selected for the Art Omi International Artists Residency Program in 2023. Locally, he’s exhibited at The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art and the Lawrence Arts Center.

SESSION SPEAKERS

Brunette man with short hair and mustache

Christopher Erazo

Christopher Erazo is a Chicano/Mexican American photographer and videographer based in Lawrence, Kansas. His creative yet simple style and distinctive use of VHS videography have earned his work exhibitions in Mexico City, multiple regional galleries, and the Smithsonian in Washington, D.C. Through his art, Christopher celebrates Chicano culture while highlighting the beauty of all cultures, reimagining traditional works with a modern perspective, and inspiring young creators to embrace their heritage and unique voices.

 

 

Man sitting down on a wooden floor in front of a white wall

Matthew Willie Garcia

Matthew Willie Garcia is a California native now based in Kansas City, MO. Garcia’s work transcends traditional print media working in screen printing, mokuhanga, projection-mapping, animation, and large-scale installations. Inspired by a blend of science, science fiction, and their queer identity, Garcia explores these themes through color abstraction and nonrepresentational forms. Holding a BFA from the Kansas City Art Institute and an MFA from the University of Kansas, Garcia has earned acclaim regionally, notably exhibiting at the Nerman Contemporary Museum of Art, Des Moines Art Center and internationally in Japan and Spain. Garcia recently served as the 2024/2025 Grant Wood Fellow at the University of Iowa.

Woman next to botanical sculpture

SunYoung Park

SunYoung Park is a South Korean interdisciplinary artist exploring hybridity, memory, and cultural identity through ceramics and mixed media. Her sculptures merge clay with fabric, wood, and botanical elements, blurring boundaries between body and object. She is a 2026 Studio Mass MoCA Fellowship recipient, a Wassaic Project Fellowship recipient, and has also held residencies at the Interdisciplinary Ceramic Research Center, University of Kansas; Charlotte Street Foundation; and Clayarch Gimhae Museum. Her work has been exhibited internationally at the Jingdezhen International Ceramic Biennale, the International Contemporary Ceramic Art Triennial in Andenne, Belgium, the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art.

Brunette woman with shoulder length hair

Joy Rhodes

Joy Rhodes is Professor and Department Chair of Fashion Merchandising and Design at JCCC. Prior to her career in higher education, she worked many years in the industry, as a merchandising manager for an apparel licensing company overseeing all aspects of product development from concept through to production and working for technology solution providers that developed software specifically for the fashion industry both on the retail and product development sides of the business. She earned her BA in Apparel Design and Production from Colorado State University in Fort Collins, CO and her MBA from Baker University in Baldwin City, KS. She also completed an extended semester program at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City.

Save the dates! Oct. 25 and 26 is a full weekend + Other October Events!

Save the date!

October is going to be another month full of activities here at the Nerman Museum, including an extra special weekend with big events on Oct. 25 and 26.

You can learn more about all events, and RSVP for the events that require registration, on our calendar page.

Four silhouettes look around a blue landscape with lanterns in their hands as they search for something

Diedrick Brackens, shadows spell my name, 2024, cotton and acrylic yarn, 102 x 134 in. Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Johnson County Community College, Overland Park, KS, Gift of Sue and Lewis Nerman, Leawood, KS.

Our major events this month include the Jerome Nerman Lecture Series, featuring Diedrick Brackens, on Saturday, Oct. 25, from 4-5 PM, at the Museum’s Hudson Auditorium, with a reception to follow.

Brackens will discuss his large-scale weavings that incorporate myth and storytelling to highlight Black and Queer histories and bodies. Brackens is best known for his tapestries that explore allegory and narrative through autobiography, along with broader themes in American history.

Brackens employs techniques from West African weaving, European tapestry-making, and quilting from the American South to create both abstract and figurative artworks. Often depicting moments of male tenderness, Brackens draws inspiration from African and African American literature, poetry and folklore.

Man and woman holding a boom box between them, standing in front of a large pink panther painting.

Jeremy Scott and Katherine Bernhardt. Photo: Wil Driscoll

On Sunday, Oct. 26, 2-5 PM, we’ll celebrate the end of A Match Made in Heaven: Katherine Bernhardt x Jeremy Scott with a Closing Countdown alongside the artists.

Teenagers looking at prints and using a printing press

Young Artists Retreat 2024. Photo: Susan McSpadden, JCCC Photographer

Earlier that same week, on Friday, Oct. 24, 8 AM-2 PM, we’ll also be hosting the 2025 Young Artists Retreat. While nominations for the in-person portion of the event is already closed, teachers and students can still register for the livestream option through October 22.

Living room setting with various people within it

The Salon for Possible Futures

Our Salon events continue, with:

  • Thursday, Oct. 2, 5:30-7 PM – Make Your Own (MYO) Pocket Charms with Amy Kligman
  • Friday, Oct. 17, 7-10 PM – Utopia/Dystopia Movie Night with Caitlin Horsmon
  • Saturday, Oct. 25, 2-3 PM – Book Swap & Share: Scare Stories
Young children participating in art activities

Students creating art projects in a Nerman Museum Youth Art Class

Lastly, our Youth Art Classes are back for the fall semester, with an all-new line up of topics and art projects. We’ll be kicking off the season with the following classes:

  • Thursday, Oct. 9, 4-7 PM – Street Fashion – Gr. 6-9
  • Saturday, Oct. 11, 2-4 PM – Accessories 3 Ways! – Gr. 3-5
  • Saturday, Oct. 18, 2-4 PM – Artful Fashion Design – Gr. K-2

September 2025 Events at the Nerman Museum

Another eventful month coming up at the Nerman Museum!

You can learn more about all events, and RSVP for the events that require registration, on our calendar page.

Living room setting with various people within it

Visitors enjoying their time in The Salon for Possible Futures

Our The Salon for Possible Futures events continue, with the September programming being as follows (please note, all Salon events are free, but due to limited capacity, RSVP is requested):

  • Saturday, Sep. 6, 1-3 PM: All Ages Drawing Party, hosted by the Kligman family
  • Saturday, Sep. 13, 1-3 PM: Letterlocking Workshop with Laura Pensar
  • Thursday, Sep. 25 – 5:30-7:30 PM: Mending Workshop with Hadley Clark
Linda Lighton: Love & War, A Fifty-Year Survey, 1975-2025 - Book Launch: Sep. 17, 2025, 5-8 PM - Free and  open to the public. Exhibition: Dec. 13, 2025-May 3, 2026

Left: Linda Lighton, Nude Descending a Staircase, 2007, glazed earthenware with china paint and luster, 18 x 11 ½ x 5 ½ in. Collection Shook, Hardy, & Bacon L.L.P. Right: Linda Lighton, Tinkerbelle, 2007, glazed earthenware with china paint and luster, 14 ½ x 13 x 12 in. Courtesy the Artist

In anticipation of one of our Fall/Winter exhibitions, Linda Lighton: Love & War, A Fifty-Year Survey, 1975-2025, the Nerman Museum is excited to announce the publication of its accompanying publication, a 208-page book of the same name, published and internationally distributed by Hirmer. Attendees will be able to purchase their own copy of the book, priced at $50. This richly illustrated monograph gives a comprehensive overview of Lighton’s pioneering body of work, which pushes the boundaries of ceramic sculpture. We’ll be celebration this book on Sep. 17, from 5-8 PM, with a book signing event with the artist.

Young children participating in art activities

Students creating art projects in a Nerman Museum Youth Art Class

Lastly, our Youth Art Classes are back for the fall semester, with an all-new line up of topics and art projects. We’ll be kicking off the season with the following classes:

  • Sep. 20, 2-4 PM: Pop Art Clay Accessories – Grades K-2
  • Sep. 27, 2-4 PM – Sew into Art – Grades 3-5

A few changes in the permanent collection galleries!

We’ve had a few works change out in the permanent collection galleries in the last week. The work by Linda Besemer that was in the Starr Gallery had to be put away to rest (it is, after all, just acrylic paint folded over a metal rod! gravity is a concern:)) and it was replaced with a work that has occupied that location previously, by Fred Tomaselli.

Waves of red and yellow zigzags throughout a void with small buildings scattered throughout it.

Fred Tomaselli (b. 1956)
A Cyclone of Paradises, 2001
Acrylic, photographs and resin on wood panel
Collection Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, 2001.22

Next door in the Kauffman Gallery the work by Hayv Kahraman was taken down to make room to re-install the work by Patrick Martinez that had previously been in that location. This large work had been de-installed about a year ago to do a small repair to one of the electrical components, which is now complete. We are excited to have it back on view!

Patrick Martinez, Sold (Old Merchant God), 2020, Stucco, neon, mean streak, ceramic, acrylic paint, spray paint, latex house paint, banner tarp, ceramic tile, tile adhesive, plexiglass, family archive photo collage, and LED sign on panel

In the near future we’ll have more changes to those galleries, with the Dyani White Hawk work going on loan soon and newly acquired works going on view. More on that soon!