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.

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

August 2025 Events at the Nerman Museum

Another month full of interesting activities here at the Nerman Museum!

composite image of 3 bands

The Elders, Beth Watts Nelson & Kelly Hunt, and Back Alley Brass Band

Light Up the Lawn, a collaboration between the Midwest Trust Center, bringing free concerts to the Nerman Museum lawn is back again! Join us on the following Fridays, starting at 8:30 PM to enjoy the bands below:

  • Aug. 15 – The Elders
  • Aug. 22 – Beth Watts Nelson & Kelly Hunt
  • Aug. 29 – Back Alley Brass Band

The Salon for Possible Futures is also hosting a couple more events (these events are also free, but due to limited space, RSVP is required):

  • Saturday, Aug. 16, 1-3 PM – Mending Workshop with Hadley Clark
  • Thursday, Aug. 28, 6-8 PM – Storytelling Night: Bad Ideas, hosted by Glenn North

Learn more and RSVP at our calendar.

Welcoming our youngest visitors to the museum

It’s summertime and we’re seeing a lot of families visiting the museum. The littlest visitors have been really enjoying the exhibitions, especially The Salon for Possible Futures!

We welcome visitors of all ages, and for our preschool visitors, here are some things we provide to enrich their visits:

Games! The Salon has games already in it, and the one pictured here is a game that was made custom for the exhibition by Sally Paul. The large wooden blocks with simple shapes on each side are perfect for open-ended play.

Tip: keep in mind that kids 3 and under often are still in the parallel play stage of development and not yet ready to play interactively, which means they’ll each want their own blocks and won’t want to build something together. With this group, I had one child who was in parallel play mode and other children who played interactively. It works fine as long as you remind everyone that we need to share the blocks, even if we don’t want to build something together.

We have touchable objects that relate to specific works (note how the children are seated in the galleries) such as dog tags, jingle beads, beaded canvas and examples of different paint textures. Kids LOVE having these opportunities to touch materials.

Storybooks are a great way to get kids engaged and focused on the art! Stopping at several works and having everyone seated on the floor listening to a storybook can help the group calm down in an exciting environment (being at the museum is exciting!)

Mouse Paint is fun for kids 3-5years old to talk about colors and color mixing. We also have color-mixing tubes which the kids love shaking up to see what colors are created. It’s important that everyone gets a turn.

Note how the reader in this video is supplementing the text by asking questions and encouraging interaction. It helps to practice reading the book several times, and to remember that the kids all want to see the pictures, so taking time to show every illustration to everyone is essential!

We can also be color investigators, using colored lenses to see how artworks look different through different colors and overlapping them.

And at the end of the tour, when everyone has had plenty of time to look and play, we can spend some time making art! We have finger crayons and crayons that can be used with a palm grip, and coloring pages and stickers featuring works by Dyani White Hawk and others.

Finally we have some goodies visitors can take home at the end, including postcards and bookmarks featuring artworks from the exhibitions, as well as zines and some of the other fun things in the cabinet drawers of The Salon.

July 2025 Events at the Nerman Museum

Colorful pop art collage

There is a lot going on in July here at the Nerman Museum!

We still have some spots available in the last few summer camps we’re hosting this month.

  • July 8-11 – Game Design Week for ages 5-7 and 8-11
  • July 15-18 – Pop Art Week for ages 8-11
  • July 22-25 – Textiles Week for ages 5-7 and 8-11
  • July 29-Aug. 1 – 3-D Art Week for ages 5-7 and 8-11

 

Living room setting with various people within it

Amy Kligman’s Salon will also be hosting more events this month!

June Events in The Salon for Possible Futures

People within a living room

Amy Kligman’s Salon

Amy Kligman’s Salon will be hosting a variety of events through the end of December, reinforcing its purpose as a gathering space, a portal for a better collective future, and the fostering of relationships and community.

In the month of June, Nerman Museum docents, educators, and the community are invited to participate in the following activities in The Salon:

  • Wednesday, June 4, 5:30-7 PM – ‘Miss You’ Cards with Kansas Poet Laureate emeritus Huascar Medina
  • Friday, June 13, 7-10 PM – Utopia/Dystopia Night with artist, curator, and educator Caitlin Horsmon
  • Saturday, June 28, 1-3 PM – Game Day with Brass Monkey, a local tabletop games company

These events are all free and open to the public, but due to limited capacity, RSVPs are required. Learn more about these events and register to participate.

Exhibition open! Amy Kligman’s Salon is a huge hit!

It has been amazing to see how fast folks have taken to using The Salon for Possible Futures to meet and hang out! I have seen so many students, families and community members using the space, playing games, writing in the notebooks, having meetings.

A reminder that this exhibition is activated through extensive programming, and you are invited to attend any of the programs that will be hosted each month through December. We hope to see you at a movie or karaoke night or a workshop in the weeks and months ahead!

There are a couple programs on the calendar coming up (one is tomorrow!)