Nov 14 - Dec 30, 2023
Concurrent retrospective exhibitions of two prominent Hawai‘i artists, Marcia Morse and George Woollard, will trace each artist’s path by highlighting notable bodies of work that offer a window into their conceptual direction and material sensibility throughout different phases of their distinct four-decade careers.
Sep 12 - Oct 28, 2023
Two solo exhibits interpret the spatial potential of the gallery with installation projects. Maui artist Chenta Laury’s work synthesizes natural fibers into forms that relate to growth, adaptation, and transformation, as modeled by plants and as metaphor for her own life and identity. San Francisco artist Holly Wong creates installations of mixed media assemblages harnessing memory, myth, and unexpressed trauma in visual reconstruction.
Jul 05 - Aug 26, 2023
Maui Arts & Cultural Center expands its commitment to creative community building with the announcement of the MACC Biennial statewide juried exhibit in Schaefer International Gallery. This is an opportunity for artists living in Hawai‘i to enter their strongest, most innovative, and thought-provoking work, embodying fresh approaches in contemporary art that raises awareness, access, and appreciation.
Apr 11 - Jun 10, 2023
The Hawai‘i Island-based collective, Consensual Lack of Reality, included Pier Fichefeux, Stephen Freedman, Andrzej Kramarz, and Daniel Sheinfeld Rodriguez. Their distinct approaches reveal the life inherent in their materials and subjects, evoking the idea that spirit, soul, and consciousness exist similarly in humans, animals, plants, and geographic features of the environment. This exhibition integrated varied forms such as ceramic totems, tarnished ph
Jan 17 - Mar 18, 2023
This invitational exhibition will feature work by ten contemporary Kanaka ʻŌiwi artists, giving voice and cultural context to ancestral ties and relationships. Artists were asked to explore new work channeled through ʻike: knowledge gained through experience and guided by sound teachings. ‘Ike Kanaka will take form as a bilingual exhibition, with a comprehensive integration of ‘ōlelo Hawai‘i that enhances the depth of engagement.