The art of Carrie Mae Weems: The Usual Suspects has offered a window into contemporary challenges. Since opening on April 12, exhibition audiences have reflected and had meaningful dialogue with fellow community members.
Read MoreWYES: Tricentennial Moment: Caroline Durieux
Updating the Portrait Gallery
Discover the recent changes in the Art in Louisiana exhibition and the student artworks they inspired.
Read MoreThe Advocate: To photographer Jerry Uelsmann, 'things needed moving around' →
The Advocate's Robin Miller on Confluence by Jerry Uelsmann.
Read MoreInspired by Carrie Mae Weems
Artists and recent LSU alums Justin Tyler Bryant and Christopher Burns set out to create a body of images as a shared response to Carrie Mae Weems' exhibition, Carrie Mae Weems: The Usual Suspects, at the LSU Museum of Art.
Read MoreinRegister: On exhibit: Angela Gregory at LSU Museum of Art →
inRegister's Kelli Bozeman gets a preview of what to expect in the Collection Spotlight: Angela Gregory exhibition.
Read More225: 2018 Best of 225 awards →
225 readers selected LSU MOA as the "Best Place to See Art" in their annual Best of 225 Awards. (Photo by Raegan Labat)
Read MoreAccessing the excess with Brent Houzenga
Visit the LSU Museum Store today to purchase prints from New Orleans artist Brent Houzenga, including selections from the Left Handed for a Year series, stickers, buttons and more.
Read MoreInspired by Robert Williams: Jonathan Mayers
We asked a few Baton Rouge-based artists to share the impact Robert Williams has had on the work they produce today.
Read MoreA closer look at Robert Williams: Slang Aesthetics with the LSU MOA staff
There are tons of details to examine in the pop surrealist work on display in Robert Williams: Slang Aesthetics. Stop by before the exhibition closes on June 17 and share your favorites by tagging LSU MOA on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Read MoreInspired by Robert Williams: Kelsey Livingston
We asked a few Baton Rouge-based artists to share the impact Robert Williams has had on the work they produce today.
Read MorePelican Bomb: Unsophisticated: Robert Williams at the LSU Museum of Art →
Pelican Bomb's Dillon Raborn on Robert Williams: Slang Aesthetics.
Read MoreThe Boston & Sandwich Tea Party
Today, tea drinking status symbols generally consist of Starbucks to-go cups, but in early nineteenth century America wealth was conveyed by spending money on a variety of table items which were each used for one very specific purpose, such as cup plates.
Read MoreThe Advocate: Carrie Mae Weems challenges systematic violence against black men in "The Usual Suspects" at the LSU Museum of Art →
The Advocate's Robin Miller on Carrie Mae Weems: The Usual Suspects.
Read More225: New visions meets blurred visions with Carrie Mae Weems’ works at LSU Museum of Art →
225's Benjamin Leger sits down with curator Courtney Taylor to discuss Carrie Mae Weems: The Usual Suspects and the work of Weems on display in Art in Louisiana.
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