Jan 21 Wednesday
Beginning November 5th and running through January 31st, there will be many new transparent watercolor paintings on display at Gallery 35 located at 35 N. Main St., St. George, UT. All art is created locally by members of the Dixie Watercolor Society and is framed and available for sale. Just in time for holiday gift giving, there will also be a collection of small works! Gallery hours are Wednesday through Saturday, 10AM to 5PM. Hope to see you there!
Jan 22 Thursday
The Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art (NEHMA) at Utah State University (USU) presents Repainting the I: The Intermountain Intertribal Indian School. The exhibition examines the artistic legacy of the Intermountain Intertribal Indian School (Intermountain) that was active from 1950 to 1984 in Brigham City, UT. On view January 24 – December 6, 2025 the exhibition comprises 11 recently restored murals that once adorned hallways and dorm rooms at the boarding school and examines this little-known chapter in American history.
January 24 through December 6, 2025Tuesday - Thursday 10:00 am - 5:00 pmFriday 10:00 am - 8:00 pmSaturday 10:00 am - 4:00 pm
Jan 23 Friday
Ogden Contemporary Arts presents an exhibit by artist Scout Invie entitled "No Place Like Home". The exhibit runs Thursday through Sunday each week May 2nd through July 13th.
Jan 24 Saturday
The exhibition Eagle Village: Sheila Nadimi consists of thirty-six 20 x 20 photographs, selected from hundreds of images by Nadimi with input from Intermountain Indian School alumni. The exhibit is showing at the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art through January 17th 2026.
Using a manual Hasselblad medium-format camera, multidisciplinary artist Sheila Nadimi first set out in 1996 to photograph what was left of the Intermountain Indian School. The campus was comprised of twenty-seven dormitory buildings, two school buildings, a gymnasium, and a maintenance building. Nadimi chose photography as a medium for this project to convey the overall sense, which the artist calls ‘mapping,’ of this architectural site, which she photographed until 2021—over a twenty-five-year period, following the demolition of the buildings and clearing of the land. Initially intrigued by the austere architecture, once inside, she found that the imprint of the former Native American students was still there, seen in artwork on the walls throughout the buildings.
An exhibition of work by twelve contemporary Indigenous artists and two collaboratives includes artists ranging from emerging to elders. The artists build on cultural traditions, push new creative boundaries, and represent some of the extraordinary work being created by Indigenous artists across the land.
The exhibition is at the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art on the USU Logan Campus through November 29th.
This exhibition title riffs on Andy Warhol's 1966-67 Exploding Plastic Inevitable, which featured a series of multimedia events that extended the exhibition beyond the gallery.