July Exhibitions and Event Listings for the Cleveland Museum of Art

Tags for: July Exhibitions and Event Listings for the Cleveland Museum of Art
  • Press Release
Tuesday July 1, 2025
a group of people posing for the camera

Photo courtesy of Unfit Agency

Contact the Museum's Media Relations Team:
(216) 707-2261
marketingandcommunications@clevelandart.org

Events 

City Stages 

Wednesdays, July 9 and 23, 2025, 7:30–9:00 p.m. 

Transformer Station 

Free 

Move and groove at City Stages, the CMA’s famous block parties that take place in front of Transformer Station and feature the best in global music. This year, the series occurs on two Wednesdays: July 9 and July 23. Each performance begins at 7:30 p.m. 

Arrive early and grab dinner and a drink at one of Ohio City’s bars or restaurants, or visit one of the local shops. Hang out in the Transformer Station beer garden and enjoy tacos from the Puente’s Tijuana Tacos food truck. 

Seating is limited—bring camp chairs and delight in an evening of music and dancing in the street.  

Free parking is available in the Lutheran Hospital lot located at West 28th Street and Franklin Boulevard. 

Transformer Station is located at 1460 West 29th Street (at the corner of Church Avenue), Cleveland, Ohio, 44113. Transformer Station remains open until 9:00 p.m. during City Stages. 

 

City Stages: Yeison Landero 

Wednesday, July 9, 2025, 7:30–9:00 p.m. 

Transformer Station 

Free; No Ticket Required 

Latin Grammy–nominated musician Yeison Landero was born in San Jacinto (Bolívar) in the very heart of the Montes de María region of the Colombian Caribbean. He carries in his soul a cumbiambero heart inherited from his grandfather Andrés Landero: a musician recognized as the king of cumbia nationally and internationally. Yeison blends the rich, folkloric sounds of the accordion with propulsive rhythms, delivering a soulful homage to his family’s cumbia legacy while infusing it with new energy for the 21st century.  

 

City Stages: Las Karamba 

Wednesday, July 23, 2025, 7:30–9:00 p.m. 

Transformer Station 

Free; No Ticket Required 

Founded in the midst of the bustling streets of Barcelona, Las Karamba consists of six women musicians who are mestizas and migrants from Venezuela, Cuba, Catalonia, France, and Argentina. Together, they create new, timeless, danceable music that includes traditional styles—including son, cha-cha-cha, salsa, and timba—influenced by rap and urban music, as well as a touch of samba and rumba. With the band’s formation, six life stories converged, each individually shaped by migration and musical heritage.  

 

Piano Cleveland: Kotaro Fukuma Sound Installation 

Tuesday, July 29, 2025, 12:00-1:00 p.m.

Ames Family Atrium 

Free; No Ticket Required 

Presented by Piano Cleveland, pianist Kotaro Fukuma creates an immersive sound installation of Japanese piano music in the Ames Family Atrium. In celebration of the exhibition Takashi Murakami: Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow, the globally acclaimed artist and 2003 Cleveland International Piano Competition First Prize winner performs works by Karen Tanaka, Ryuichi Sakamoto, and Toru Takemitsu, inspired by the contemporary aesthetic of Murakami’s visual language. 

 

New This Month 

Rose Iron Works and Art Deco 

Sunday, July 6–Sunday, October 19, 2025 

Julia and Larry Pollock Focus Gallery | Gallery 010 

Free; No Ticket Required 

In the early 1900s, as Cleveland experienced rapid economic growth and the expansion of its iron and steel industries, Hungarian ornamental blacksmith Martin Rose moved to the city and founded Rose Iron Works. It soon became one of the leading manufacturers of decorative metalwork in the United States. Trained in Budapest and Vienna in the Art Nouveau tradition, Rose was interested in artistic and technological innovations. In 1925, a groundbreaking international exhibition in Paris presented modern decorative arts—a style that later became known as Art Deco. Rose’s compatriot and a designer active in Paris, Paul Fehér joined the Rose company in Cleveland a few years later. Their artistic collaboration resulted in some of the best Art Deco ironwork in the country, including the celebrated Muse with Violin Screen (1930), now in the CMA’s collection. This exhibition explores Rose’s transition from Art Nouveau to Art Deco, focuses on his 1930s commissions, and places his work in the European context. It also emphasizes the importance of Rose Iron Works, a family-run Cleveland company that for 120 years has been adorning some of the city’s most notable buildings. 

Major support is provided by the Malcolm E. Kenney Curatorial Research Fund. Additional support is provided by the Simon Family Foundation, a supporting foundation of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland.   

 

Final Weeks 

The Bubon Statue Departs: Farewell Display of Monumental Ancient Bronze 

Through Tuesday, July 8, 2025 

Monte and Usha Ahuja Founders Rotunda 

Free; No Ticket Required 

This monumental ancient bronze statue of a draped figure of a man stands at the center of the Monte and Usha Ahuja Founders Rotunda. Acquired by the CMA with best intentions in 1986, the statue was recently deaccessioned for return to Türkiye after scientific tests showed that it likely once stood atop a stone pedestal at Bubon, an archaeological site in Lycia (now southwestern Türkiye). Its temporary display in the rotunda, made possible through the generosity of the Republic of Türkiye and the District Attorney of New York County, celebrates the mutual goodwill and recent cooperative research efforts undertaken on the statue and at Bubon. This is a positive outcome to a lengthy process, an opportunity to share new knowledge about this longtime visitor favorite and bid it farewell before its reunion with other large-scale bronze statues from Bubon. Four text panels accompanying the statue explore its creation, pose, dress, and identity; the archaeological site of Bubon; recent scientific analyses and results; and legal and ethical aspects. 

 

Creation, Birth, and Rebirth 

Through Sunday, July 27, 2025 

Gallery 115 

Free; No Ticket Required 

The exhibition explores some of the fundamental moments in the sacred narratives of the medieval world: the creation of the universe, the birth of its gods and its humans, and visions of the end of life conceived as a new beginning. The exhibition asks a series of questions: How was the creation of the world imagined in different religions? How were the creators of that world visualized in several religious cultures? How were ideas about conception, incarnation, and birth depicted in the objects created by these cultures? How did they perceive the difference between birth and creation, and the connections between death and rebirth? What parallels were drawn between miraculous and everyday births? How did religious teachings on reincarnation and resurrection manifest in medieval material culture? What, more broadly, was the role of images in making sense of the universe?  

The objects in the exhibition span from the 800s to the 1500s, drawn from several collections in the Cleveland Museum of Art, including medieval art, Chinese art, Indian and Southeast Asian art, art of the Americas, and prints and drawings, offering possibilities of forging connections across cultures and geographies.   

The exhibition is a culmination of several years of collaboration between the medieval art program at Case Western Reserve University and the Cleveland Museum of Art, made possible by the support of the Mellon Foundation. 

 

On-Site Activities 

Lunchtime Lecture 

Refocusing Chinese Photography at the Millennium 

Tuesday, July 1, 2025, 12:00–1:00 p.m. 

Gartner Auditorium 

Free; Ticket Required 

Come to the CMA for a quick bite of art history. Every first Tuesday of each month, join curators, conservators, scholars, and other museum staff for 30-minute talks on objects currently on display in the museum galleries.  

This month, CMA curator of photography Barbara Tannenbaum discusses how the revolutionary approach of young artists changed photography in China in the late 1990s. 

This exhibition is made possible with support from the Seven Five Fund. 

 

Sensory-Friendly Saturday 

Saturday, July 19, 2025, 9:00–10:00 a.m.  

Free; No Ticket Required 

Sensory-Friendly Saturday events offer adaptations to meet diverse sensory-processing needs every third Saturday of each month from 9:00 to 10:00 a.m. Guests on the autism spectrum, people experiencing dementia, and those of all ages who have intellectual or developmental disabilities are invited to participate in a calming museum experience with less stimulation in a section of the museum’s galleries before they open to the public—reducing crowds, noise, and distractions. 

Guests can explore the galleries at their own pace and share this time and space with open-minded members of the community.  

Things to Know While Planning Your Visit 

  • All guests must pass through metal detectors at the museum entrance. 
  • Attendees are encouraged to bring adaptive equipment, including wheelchairs, walkers, and noise-reducing headphones and technology. The Cleveland Museum of Art also offers a limited number of wheelchairs. 
  • The museum store and café open at 9:00 a.m. on these Saturdays.  
  • Sensory-Friendly Saturday events are free. Parking in the CMA garage is $14 for nonmembers and $7 for members. 
  • Once participants enter, they are welcome to stay for the day. The museum opens to the public at 10:00 a.m. 

 

Disability Pride Month Tours 

Each Sunday in July, 12:00–1:00 p.m.  

Ames Family Atrium 

Free; Ticket Required 

Celebrate Disability Pride Month with guided tours featuring artworks by artists with disabilities. From historical figures to contemporary visionaries, explore how artists have navigated, challenged, and redefined ideas of ability and expression.  

The museum celebrates Disability Pride Month in July and all year round. Learn about artists with disabilities in the museum’s collection in daily guided tours and Art and Conversation tours. To schedule private tours for adult groups of 10 or more, please contact grouptours@clevelandart.org or call 216-707-2752. 

 

Art and Conversation Tours 

Tuesdays, 10:15–10:45 a.m. 

Ames Family Atrium 

Free; Ticket Required 

Join us for 30-minute close-looking sessions, from 10:15 to 10:45 a.m. on Tuesdays. This program offers a focused look at just a couple of artworks, versus the traditional 60-minute public tours of the museum’s collection. 

 

Daily Guided Tours 

Tuesday–Sunday Weekly 

Ames Family Atrium 

Free; Ticket Required 

Public tours are offered daily at 11:00 a.m. and 1:00 p.m., Tuesday through Sunday, and at 11:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. on Tuesdays. Art and Conversation Tours are offered at 10:15 a.m. on Tuesdays. 

 

Date-Night Tours 

Fridays, 6:15–7:15 p.m. 

Ames Family Atrium 

Free; Ticket Required 

Explore the evolving world of romance with Dating Through the Ages, a unique tour tracing the art of courtship across centuries. From the elegance of ancient Greek vases capturing subtle flirtations to medieval carvings telling tales of chivalric love, this tour offers a glimpse into how courtship rituals have shifted over time. Experience the allure of Rococo paintings, where opulent attire and coded gestures hinted at romantic intentions, and learn the dating dynamics of Victorian England. Each piece tells a story of love and desire, offering a cultural journey through the art of attraction across civilizations and eras. 

The museum also offers daily guided tours and Art and Conversation tours. To schedule private tours for adult groups of 10 or more, please contact grouptours@clevelandart.org or call 216-707-2752.  

 

Art and Nature: Developing Creativity and Critical Thinking Through Observation 

Tuesday–Thursday, July 22–24, 2025, 9:30 a.m.–3:30 p.m. 

The Cleveland Museum of Art and Cleveland Botanical Garden 

Ticket Required 

Investigate the curricular connections between art and nature with Cleveland Botanical Garden and the Cleveland Museum of Art.  

This three-day teacher workshop uses trees, plant structures, and pollinators as the inspiration for observation and description. Attendees acquire classroom skills and strategies that align with the creative and critical thinking goals of both content areas in the PK–12 curriculum. Participants engage in hands-on experiences and take-home projects for art and science. We explore the collections and grounds of Cleveland Botanical Garden in the mornings and the CMA in the afternoons. Through this workshop, participants learn to connect their curricula with the exciting resources available at both institutions. 

Cost: $200 (One SH graduate credit from Dominican University of California is available for an additional cost.) 

 

The Art of Impressionism 

Wednesday, July 23, 2025, 11:00 a.m. –12:00 p.m. 

Parker Hannifin Corporation Donor Gallery (North Courtyard Lobby) 

Ticket Required 

Beloved by museumgoers worldwide, the art of Impressionism is appreciated for the spontaneity of its brushwork, its vibrant colors, and its fleeting effects of light painted en plein air. Meanwhile, the Impressionists themselves are often celebrated as misunderstood rebels, who fought against the tyranny of the French Salon. Yet, the stories of Impressionism and Impressionist works of art are often much more complex than typically acknowledged. Join graduate curatorial fellow Jillian Kruse for a special members-only class, which explores new perspectives on some of the Impressionist works in the collection.  

This on-site class involves walking through the museum galleries. Gallery stools and assistive listening devices are available for use in the museum. The class meets in the Parker Hannifin Corporation Donor Gallery (north courtyard lobby), located off the atrium, on the first floor of the museum. Tickets are available soon. Please contact adultprograms@clevelandart.org with any questions. 

 

The Art of Impressionism 

Thursday, July 24, 2025, 11:00 a.m. –12:00 p.m. 

Parker Hannifin Corporation Donor Gallery (North Courtyard Lobby) 

Ticket Required (Sold Out) 

 

The Art of Impressionism 

Friday, July 25, 2025, 1:00 p.m. –2:00 p.m. 

Parker Hannifin Corporation Donor Gallery (North Courtyard Lobby) 

Ticket Required (Sold Out) 

 

Continuing Exhibitions  

Karamu Artists Inc.: Printmaking, Race, and Community 

Through Sunday, August 17, 2025 

James and Hanna Bartlett Prints and Drawings Galleries | Galleries 101A–B  
Free; No Ticket Required 

The graphic arts played a groundbreaking role at Cleveland’s Karamu House, one of the nation’s preeminent Black community art centers. Initially founded as a settlement house in 1915, Karamu House became one of the best-known sites for Black American culture. Although noted today for its theater program, the institution housed a printmaking workshop beginning in the 1930s, where artists and community members alike—including a young Langston Hughes—could experiment with various techniques, playing on printmaking’s fundamental accessibility and democracy. This exploration led to the foundation of Karamu Artists Inc., a group that counted some of the most recognized Black printmakers of the Works Progress Administration (WPA) era—such as Elmer W. Brown, Hughie Lee-Smith, Charles Sallée, and William E. Smith—among its members. While a landmark 1942 traveling exhibition celebrated these printmakers’ expression of collective and personal identity, this exhibition is the first to place Karamu Artists Inc. and its innovative use of the graphic arts within the broader context of American art during the 1930s and ’40s, such as the WPA and the legacy of the Harlem Renaissance. 

Karamu Artists Inc. presents more than 50 prints created by the group’s members, including works from the museum’s collection as well as important loans from local and national institutions. It is accompanied by a richly illustrated catalogue, featuring essays by leading scholars of Black American art. 

This exhibition is made possible with support from the M. E. and F. J. Callahan Foundation, the Malcolm E. Kenney Curatorial Research Fund, and Anne T. and Donald F. Palmer.   

 

Vito Acconci: Centers 

Through Sunday, September 7, 2025 

Gallery 224B 

Free; No Ticket Required 

In Centers, Vito Acconci faces the camera head-on, attempting to keep his finger directed at the exact center of the screen, which displays his own image. In pointing at himself, the artist also points at the viewer, creating a tension between the two. Of the film, Acconci wrote, “The result (the TV image) turns the activity around: a pointing away from myself, at an outside viewer—I end up widening my focus onto passing viewers (I’m looking straight out by looking straight in).” Acconci started his career in the 1960s as a poet. By the end of the decade, he was a leading figure in the fields of performance, sound, and video art.  

 

Takashi Murakami: Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow 

Through Sunday, September 7, 2025 

The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation Exhibition Hall and Gallery 

Ticket Required 

Discover an incredible new exhibition of works from a Japanese artist known for his unique style that simultaneously honors the rich tradition of Japanese art and deploys the cultural energies of anime, manga, otaku, and kawaii in singular contemporary artworks. Visitors can explore how—after shared historical events and trauma—art can address crisis, healing, outrage, and escapist fantasy. In addition to works more than 30 feet wide on view, the centerpiece of the exhibition is the re-creation of the Yumedono, or Dream Hall, from Nara’s Hōryūji Temple complex in the Cleveland Museum of Art’s magnificent atrium. The museum’s deep holdings of Japanese art lead you even more profoundly into the exhibition’s themes. Originating at the Broad in Los Angeles, Takashi Murakami: Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow is presented with expanded scope at the CMA. 

The artwork presented in this exhibition was made in response to three events: the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki by the United States in 1945 during World War II; the March 11, 2011, Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, the most powerful earthquake ever recorded in Japan, which also caused the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident; and the COVID-19 pandemic, which began in 2019. Murakami uses his art to interpret these historical events and their lasting effects. The works explore topics such as how people may change when they are experiencing trauma, how historical events may have caused outpourings of creative and religious fervor, and how art addressing contemporary obsessions as diverse as gaming, the metaverse, trading cards, street fashion trends, anime, and manga can be an entry point to engaging the past. 

Art can respond to disaster. Like religion, it can work through crisis and register experiences expressed (and sometimes coded) by and through form. Like religion, art can be a mass phenomenon, a gathering around compelling ideas. It can address crisis directly, offering healing, outrage, or catharsis. It can also offer escapist fantasy. Murakami’s likening of gaming and other forms of entertainment to religion speaks of a spirit of a sort, of collective activities where societal energies are expended, developed, and ritualized. 

In the wake of the pandemic, through planning an exhibition at the Kyocera Museum of Art, Murakami turned the lens of his artwork onto the city of Kyoto as both the keeper of many of Japan’s cultural traditions—including ikebana, Kabuki theater, geisha and teahouse traditions, and monumental screen painting—and a site of shifting power structures of religion and politics, both imperial and warrior. Selections of this new work join the exhibition and, newly aligned with Cleveland’s deep holdings of Japanese art, allow the exhibition to go even deeper into its original themes.  

The Yumedono in Nara is believed to occupy the same location as the home of Shōtoku Taishi, who converted his father, Emperor Yōmei, into accepting Buddhism after calling for the intercession of Buddha to cure the emperor of an illness. Shōtoku plays a profound role in the history of Japan and has been the focus of powerful religious cults throughout Japanese history. The Yumedono houses the Kuse Kannon (a likeness of Shōtoku), believed to have the power to save people from suffering. Murakami’s re-creation of the Yumedono houses four paintings—Blue Dragon, Vermillion Bird, White Tiger, and Black Tortoise (all from 2024)—that directly present and mine the city of Kyoto through its many overlapping mythologies and traditions. 

While it may seem counterintuitive to house four paintings addressing the founding of Kyoto in a historic building from Nara, in doing so, Murakami is creating a powerful meditation on the connection between mythology and art to political power, as well as the hybridity and pliability of Japanese cultural traditions. In moving the imperial capital of Japan to Kyoto in the eighth century, Emperor Kanmu intended to extricate his court from the clerical power structures of Nara. However, to do so, an emphasis was placed on Shōtoku’s role in the area, a necessary alignment with one of Japan’s central figures and heroes. In Kyoto, the Rokkakudō Temple—also founded by Shōtoku and said to enshrine the Nyoirin Kannon, an amulet found by Shōtoku as a child, which is also said to have healing powers—would become an important site of religious pilgrimage, and Kyoto would go on to become both a political and importantly a religious center of Japan.  

In placing his Kyoto paintings in the Yumedono, rooting them in Shōtoku’s legacy of healing through the veneration of devotional objects, Murakami testifies to the nature of art and its capacity to align cultural energies, both for individuals and for Japanese society. 

Docents are available on Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays from 2:00 to 4:00 p.m. throughout the exhibition to answer questions and provide background information on the artworks. This service is free to all visitors in the exhibition. 

This exhibition is presented by Akron Children’s. 

Akron Children's logo 

Major support is provided by the Womens Council of the Cleveland Museum of Art. Generous support is provided by Yuval Brisker and by the Gottlob family in loving memory of Milford Gottlob, MD. Additional support is provided by Mrs. Viia R. Beechler, GFP Private Wealth, Kenneth H. Kirtz and family, and Frank and Fran Porter. 

 

From the Earth Through Her Hands: African Ceramics 

Through Sunday, September 21, 2025 

Gallery 108A 

Free; No Ticket Required 

African women have worked in ceramics for millennia, yet their accomplishments are underexhibited compared to male artists who sculpted in wood. This rotation considers key western, central, and eastern African ceramics spanning the first through 20th centuries. Three themes highlight their makers’ technical and aesthetic accomplishments: inspiration and instructors; idealized portraits; and practical beauty. The intimate presentation illuminates the deeply historical practice of African women working in ceramics and considers connections between functional and display (“fine art” ceramics). It highlights the technical, training, and aesthetic links among 20th-century female African artists working in ceramics. One of the 10 works is newly acquired (a mid-20th-century bowl by renowned Nigerian ceramicist Ladi Kwali OON MBE), while others have not recently been on view or are being exhibited for the first time.   

 

Arts of the Maghreb: North African Textiles and Jewelry 

Through Sunday, October 12, 2025 

Arlene M. and Arthur S. Holden Gallery | Gallery 234 

Free; No Ticket Required 

This exhibition spotlights the rich artistic traditions of Morocco, Algeria, and Tunisia during the late 1800s and the early 1900s, through a display of elaborate textiles and fine jewelry in the collection of the Cleveland Museum of Art. These works introduce the specialized skills of North African artists, both Amazigh (Berber) and Arab, Muslim and Jewish, and the diverse aesthetics of their multifaceted communities. The CMA’s founder J. H. Wade II began forming the collection during his personal travels across the region, and many works are on view for the very first time. 

This exhibition is made possible with support from the Malcolm E. Kenney Curatorial Research Fund and Anne T. and Donald F. Palmer. 

 

Reinstallation of Krishna Lifting Mount Govardhan 

Through Sunday, November 2, 2025 

Gallery 243 | Nancy F. and Joseph P. Keithley Gallery | Gallery 244 

Free; No Ticket Required 

The monumental sculpture of Krishna Lifting Mount Govardhan returns to the permanent collection galleries for the first time since its new reconstruction was completed in 2021. To complement this major addition, 13 stone and bronze works from India, Cambodia, and Indonesia are also brought out for display. 

 

Landscapes by Arnold Chang: A Retrospective and Recent Acquisitions  

Through Sunday, November 9, 2025 

Clara T. Rankin Suite of Chinese Art Galleries | Gallery 240A 
Free; No Ticket Required 

This installation reviews the artistic career of Arnold Chang (张洪) (Zhang Hong, American, born 1954) and celebrates the museum’s recent acquisition by Chang, Secluded Valley in the Cold Mountains, a pivotal work that marks his breakthrough as an international contemporary ink artist. Showcasing 18 works by the artist, plus the CMA’s Number 5, 1950 (1950) by Jackson Pollock, the exhibition explores Chang’s formative years, which eventually culminate in free and exploratory ways that include the use of photography and color. 

 

Refocusing Photography: China at the Millennium 

Through Sunday, November 16, 2025 

Mark Schwartz and Bettina Katz Photography Galleries | Gallery 230 

Free; No Ticket Required 

From 1949 to 1978, photography in the People’s Republic of China was reserved for governmental propaganda: Its function was to present an idealized image of life under Chairman Mao and communist rule. In 1978, as China opened to global trade and Western societies, photography as documentation, art, and personal expression experienced a sudden awakening. Personal photographic societies formed, art schools began teaching photography, and information on Western contemporary art became available.   

In the late 1990s, a new generation of Chinese artists, many initially trained as painters, revolted against traditional academic definitions of photography. Building on the work done in the previous decades by Western artists, they dissolved the boundaries between photography, performance art, conceptual art, and installation. In so doing, they brought photography into the foreground in Chinese contemporary art. This exhibition presents works from the museum’s collection by eight key artists from that generation.  

Born between 1962 and 1969, these artists grew up during the Cultural Revolution (1966–76), when conformity was required and past intellectual and artistic products—whether artistic, family history, or documentary—were banned and destroyed. They also experienced the cultural vacuum that followed this erasure. As adults, these artists lived in a radically different China—newly prosperous, individualistic, and consumerist. They helped develop a new visual idiom, producing artworks that addressed their country’s recent history, its swift societal transformation, and their own resultant shift in identity as Chinese. 

This exhibition is made possible with support from the Seven Five Fund.  

 

Practice and Play in Japanese Art 

Through Sunday, November 30, 2025 

Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation Japanese Art Gallery | Gallery 235A 

Free; No Ticket Required 

From the 1200s to the 1800s, developing a balanced set of military (bu,武) and cultural (bun, 文) skills was considered important for the elites of Japan’s warrior class. The artworks in this gallery relate to these divergent yet complementary pursuits. Horse riding and falconry were among the martial arts, along with archery. Poetry competitions tested people’s ability to compose verse on the spot, and incense games challenged them to identify particular scents. The practices of calligraphy, music, painting, and games of strategy, often informed by Chinese precedents, provided multiple paths to personal cultivation and community. 

 

Native North American Textiles and Works on Paper 

Through Sunday, December 14, 2025 
Sarah P. and William R. Robertson Gallery | Gallery 231 

Free; No Ticket Required 

On display from the permanent collection are two Diné (Navajo) textiles from the late 1800s, as well as a watercolor from the 1930s made by Oqwa Pi, a member of the San Ildefonso Pueblo. 

 

Ancient Andean Textiles 

Through Sunday, December 14, 2025 

Jon A. Lindseth and Virginia M. Lindseth, PhD, Galleries of the Ancient Americas | Gallery 232 

Ancient Andean weavers created one of the world’s most distinguished textile traditions. This installation features examples utilizing the tapestry technique, particularly esteemed in antiquity. 

 

Indian Painting of the 1500s: Continuities and Transformations 

Through January 11, 2026 

Gallery 242B 

Free; No Ticket Required 

When the 1500s began, the dominant style of Indian painting was flat and abstract with a limited, mainly primary color palette. By the 1520s, a new style emerged with greater narrative complexities and dramatic energy that was to be foundational for later developments. Concurrently, some artists began working in the pastel palette and with delicate motifs reinterpreted from Persian art.  

Then, around 1560, with the exuberant patronage of the third Mughal emperor Akbar (born 1542, reigned 1556–1605), artists from different parts of the empire and trained in a variety of Indian styles came together in a new imperial painting workshop. The workshop was led by Persian masters brought from the imperial court in Iran. The formation of Mughal painting shaped by Akbar’s taste for drama and realism had a lasting impact on the cultural life of India. With its naturalism and vibrant compositions, the revolutionary new style was distinct from its predecessors, both Indian and Persian. The paintings in this gallery trace the dramatic changes that occurred during the 1500s alongside compositions that artists chose to retain and reinvent. Central to this story is a manuscript of the Tuti-nama (Tales of a Parrot),anillustrated collection of fables made for Akbar around 1560–65 now in the Cleveland Museum of Art. 

 

Juxtaposition and Juncture in Korean Modern and Contemporary Art 

Through April 1, 2026 

Korea Foundation Gallery | Gallery 236  
Free; No Ticket Required 

The term “juxtaposition” here refers to the side-by-side placement of two or more artworks that are significantly different from one another. Featuring Korean modern and contemporary objects that the CMA has collected over the past 15 years, this thematic exhibition juxtaposes them to create an exciting juncture of connections through their visual and material contrasts.   

While the selected works were created by Korean artists from diverse backgrounds and different generations, they make a poignant meeting place illustrating how objects from the past inspired contemporary artists to create new experiences and artistic expressions.   

 

Adorning Ritual: Jewish Ceremonial Art from the Jewish Museum, New York 

Through Sunday, May 10, 2026 

Various Galleries 

Free; No Ticket Required 

The Cleveland Museum of Art houses an encyclopedic collection, giving visitors valuable insights and perspectives into the lives and cultures of people around the world and throughout time. To enhance its permanent collection and to more fully represent the stories and objects important to our communities, the museum is displaying art on loan from the Jewish Museum, New York, in six galleries. 

Most of the works are ritual objects relating to Judaism or the lives of Jewish people, from silver Torah finials to an inlaid marble panel commemorating a marriage. The objects have been placed in context with other works of the same time or region, allowing a fuller narrative to unfold. As you encounter these objects in the galleries, we invite you to consider their relationships to the other works in these spaces. 

In addition to the loans from the Jewish Museum, two examples of Jewish ceremonial art from local collections are on display in two additional galleries: an etrog box recently acquired by the Cleveland Museum of Art and a miniature Torah ark on loan from the Mishkan Or Museum of Jewish Cultures in Beachwood, Ohio.  

Principal support is provided by Rebecca and David Heller. Additional support is provided by Michael Frank and the late Pat Snyder, Richard A. Horvitz and Erica Hartman-Horvitz, Mr. and Mrs. David D. Kahan, and the Simon Family Foundation, a supporting foundation of the Jewish Federation of Cleveland. 

 

Children’s Armor from the Imperial Habsburg Armory in Vienna 

Through Sunday, June 4, 2028 

Armor Court Jack, Joseph, and Morton Mandel Armor Court | 210A 

Free; No Ticket Required 

Four historically significant suits of armor from the Imperial Habsburg Armory in Vienna, Austria, are being displayed in the armor court for the next three years. The selection focuses on children’s armor and weapons to illustrate how a military education played an important role in training boys to become a knight. A few objects from the CMA’s own collection of children’s armor are being shown alongside these magnificent loans.  

Principal support is provided by the Jack, Joseph, and Morton Mandel Foundation.  

 

Transformer Station 

1460 W 29th St, Cleveland, OH 44113 

CMA Artists at Work 

Through Sunday, August 3, 2025 

Free; No Ticket Required 

CMA Artists at Work renews a long-standing CMA tradition of showcasing work from the breadth of local artists who work for the CMA.  

The mission of the CMA is to fulfill its dual roles as one of the world’s most distinguished and comprehensive art museums and one of Northeast Ohio’s principal civic and cultural institutions. With a total staff of more than 450, the museum is proud to present this exhibition featuring the talent of staff from all areas of the museum.   

CMA Artists at Work is organized by the CMA’s exhibitions department.  

 

CMA Community Arts Center On-Site Activities   

2937 West 25th Street, Cleveland, OH 44113  

Free Parking in the Lot off Castle Avenue | Estacionamiento gratis en la Avenida Castle  

 

Comic Club | Club de Cómic  

Saturday, July 5, 2025, 11:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m. 

Free; No Ticket Required 

Be inspired and venture into the world of storytelling with artist Kobe Saunders. Work in the company of others to develop your own style and collaborate! 

Explore the long history of sequential art through various genres and cultures including newspaper comic strips, American superhero comics and graphic novels, Japanese manga, and media adaptations (film and television) of these stories. Practice techniques to improve drawing and storytelling skills with a focus in character design, visual language, and panel structure.  

Inspírate y aventúrate en el mundo de la narración de historias con el artista Kobe Saunders. ¡Trabaja en compañía de otros para desarrollar tu propio estilo y colaborar!  

Explora la larga historia del arte secuencial a través de varios géneros y culturas, incluidas las tiras cómicas de periódicos, los cómics y novelas gráficas de superhéroes estadounidenses, el manga japonés y las adaptaciones de medios (cine y televisión) de estas historias. Practique técnicas para mejorar las habilidades de dibujo y narración con un enfoque en el diseño de personajes, el lenguaje visual y la estructura de paneles.  

 

Community Arts Center Open Studios | Estudios abiertos del centro de artes comunitario 

Saturdays and Sundays, 1:00–4:00 p.m. 

Free; No Ticket Required 

Enjoy free, drop-in art making. A monthly theme connects community, art, and exploration.  In celebration of Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander Month, join us during the month of May and help us build a flower wall, inspired by the work of Takashi Murakami: Stepping on the Tail of a Rainbow

Disfrute el arte con toda la familia. Gratis para participar. Cada mes presenta una temática connectando el arte, la comunidad y la exploración. Para celebrar el Mes de los Asiático-Americanos, los Nativos Hawaianos y los Isleños del Pacífico, únase a nosotros durante el mes de mayo y ayúdenos a construir un muro de flores, inspirado en el trabajo de Takashi Murakami: ¡Pisando la cola de un arco iris! 

 

Family FUNdays | Día de Alegria Familiar at the CAC  

Monthly on the first Sunday, 1:00–4:00 p.m. 

Free; No Ticket Required 

Enjoy free family fun and explore art celebrating community. This monthly event features family-friendly games, movement-based activities, and art making, open to all ages and abilities! Join us in June to help create larger-than-life community masks led by artist Sylvia Munodawafa, in connection with cultural traditions, modern methods, and Parade the Circle. 

Únase a nosotros para divertirse con familia cada mes, mientras exploramos el arte celebrando comunidad. Gratis para participar. Juegos para toda la familia, actividades basadas en movimientos, y creación de arte. ¡Abiertas a todos los edades y habilidades! Únase a nosotros en junio para ayudar a crear máscaras comunitarias más grandes que la vida dirigidas por la artista Sylvia Munodawafa, en conexión con las tradiciones culturales, los métodos modernos y Parade the Circle. 

 

Yoga for All: Connecting, Mind, Body, and Community | Yoga para Todos: Conectando, Mente, Cuerpo y Comunidad 

Monthly on Each First Saturday, 12:00–2:00 p.m. 

Free; Ticket Required | Gratis; Es Necesario Registrarse 

Come one, come all, both short and tall, for free yoga at the Community Arts Center!   
We invite our Cleveland-area families every first Saturday to come out for an afternoon of movement, fun, relaxation, and connection at the CAC! This free event is hosted by Cleveland Clinic yoga professional and Lululemon ambassador Valerie Williams, who guides you through a series of fun stretches, movements, games, and giveaways to brighten up your day! Practice yoga alongside your kids, parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, or very best friends—all ages are welcome! Don’t worry if your little one might not stay quiet on their yoga mat—we encourage kids to have fun while they move, or they have the option to read or draw in our studios. Snacks and refreshments are provided for all children in attendance. Please join us after yoga for an art-making session with our amazing Community Arts Center staff.   

Participants are encouraged to bring their own yoga mats. Limited mats are available. Email commartsinfo@clevelandart.org to reserve your spot. 

¡Vengan uno, vengan todos, tanto bajos como altos, para practicar yoga gratis en el Centro de Artes Comunitarias! ¡Invitamos a nuestras familias del área de Cleveland cada primer sábado a salir a pasar una tarde de movimiento, diversión, relajación y conexión en el CAC! Este evento gratuito es presentado por la profesional de yoga de Cleveland Clinic y embajadora de Lululemon, Valerie Williams, quien lo guía a través de una serie de divertidos estiramientos, movimientos, juegos y obsequios para alegrar su día. Practica yoga junto a tus hijos, padres, abuelos, tías, tíos o mejores amigos, ¡todas las edades son bienvenidas! No te preocupes si tu pequeño no se queda callado en su esterilla de yoga: animamos a los niños a divertirse mientras se mueven, o tienen la opción de leer o dibujar en nuestros estudios. Se proporcionan refrigerios y refrigerios para todos los niños que asisten. Únase a nosotros después del yoga para una sesión de creación artística con nuestro increíble personal del Centro de Artes Comunitarias. 

Se anima a los participantes a traer sus propias colchonetas de yoga. Hay colchonetas limitadas disponibles.  

Envíe un correo electrónico a commartsinfo@clevelandart.org para reservar su lugar.  

The Cleveland Museum of Art is pleased to present a variety of performing arts events. The views expressed by performers during these events are their own and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the Cleveland Museum of Art. 

The 2024–25 Performing Arts Series is sponsored by the Musart Society. This program is made possible in part by the Ernest L. and Louise M. Gartner Fund, the P. J. McMyler Musical Endowment Fund, and the Anton and Rose Zverina Music Fund. 

Performances at Transformer Station are generously supported by the Cleveland Foundation. 

All exhibitions at the Cleveland Museum of Art are underwritten by the CMA Fund for Exhibitions.  Principal annual support is provided by Michael Frank and the late Pat Snyder, the Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation, the John and Jeanette Walton Exhibition Fund, and Margaret and Loyal Wilson. Major annual support is provided by the late Dick Blum and Harriet Warm and the Frankino-Dodero Family Fund for Exhibitions Endowment. Generous annual support is provided by two anonymous donors, Gini and Randy Barbato, Cynthia and Dale Brogan, Dr. Ben and Julia Brouhard, Brenda and Marshall Brown, Gail and Bill Calfee, the Leigh H. Carter family, Dr. William A. Chilcote Jr. and Dr. Barbara S. Kaplan, Joseph and Susan Corsaro, Ron and Cheryl Davis, Richard and Dian Disantis, the Jeffery Wallace Ellis Trust in memory of Lloyd H. Ellis Jr., Leigh and Andy Fabens, Florence Kahane Goodman, Janice Hammond and Edward Hemmelgarn, Robin Heiser, the late Marta and the late Donald M. Jack Jr., the estate of Walter and Jean Kalberer, Mrs. Nancy M. Lavelle, Eva and Rudolf Linnebach, the William S. Lipscomb Fund, Bill and Joyce Litzler, Lu Anne and the late Carl Morrison, Jeffrey Mostade and Eric Nilson and Varun Shetty, Sarah Nash, Courtney and Michael Novak, Tim O’Brien and Breck Platner, Dr. Nicholas and Anne Ogan, William J. and Katherine T. O’Neill, Henry Ott-Hansen, the Pickering Foundation, Christine Fae Powell, Peter and Julie Raskind, Michael and Cindy Resch, Marguerite and James Rigby, William Roj and Mary Lynn Durham, Betty T. and David M. Schneider, Elizabeth and Tim Sheeler, Saundra K. Stemen, Paula and Eugene Stevens, the Womens Council of the Cleveland Museum of Art, and Claudia Woods and David Osage. 

The Cleveland Museum of Art is funded in part by residents of Cuyahoga County through a public grant from Cuyahoga Arts & Culture. 

Education programs, exhibitions, and performing arts programs are supported in part by the Ohio Arts Council, which receives support from the State of Ohio and the National Endowment for the Arts.  

All education programs at the Cleveland Museum of Art are underwritten by the CMA Fund for Education.  Principal support is provided by Dieter and Susan M. Kaesgen. Major annual support is provided by Brenda and Marshall Brown, Eva and Rudolf Linnebach, Medical Mutual of Ohio, Gail C. and Elliott L. Schlang, Shurtape Technologies, and the Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation. Generous annual support is provided by an anonymous donor, Gini and Randy Barbato, the M. E. and F. J. Callahan Foundation, Dr. William A. Chilcote Jr. and Dr. Barbara S. Kaplan, Char and Chuck Fowler, the Giant Eagle Foundation, Robin Heiser, the late Marta and the late Donald M. Jack Jr., Susan LaPine, Bill and Joyce Litzler, the Logsdon Family Fund for Education, Sarah Nash, Courtney and Michael Novak, William J. and Katherine T. O’Neill, the Pickering Foundation, William Roj and Mary Lynn Durham, Suzanne Cushwa Rusnak and Jeff Rusnak, Betty T. and David M. Schneider, the Sally and Larry Sears Fund for Education Endowment, Roy Smith, Paula and Eugene Stevens, the Trilling Family Foundation, Jack and Jeanette Walton, and the Womens Council of the Cleveland Museum of Art. 

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About the Cleveland Museum of Art  

The Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA) is renowned for the quality and breadth of its collection, which includes more than 66,500 artworks and spans 6,000 years of achievement in the arts. The museum is a significant international forum for exhibitions, scholarship, and performing arts and is a leader in digital innovation. One of the foremost encyclopedic art museums in the United States, the CMA is recognized for its award-winning open access program—which provides free digital access to images and information about works in the museum’s collection—and is free of charge to all. The museum is located in the University Circle neighborhood with two satellite locations on Cleveland’s west side: the Community Arts Center and Transformer Station. 

The museum is supported in part by residents of Cuyahoga County through a public grant from Cuyahoga Arts & Culture and made possible in part by the Ohio Arts Council (OAC), which receives support from the State of Ohio and the National Endowment for the Arts. The OAC is a state agency that funds and supports quality arts experiences to strengthen Ohio communities culturally, educationally, and economically. For more information about the museum and its holdings, programs, and events, call 888-CMA-0033 or visit cma.org