Seeds of Culture: The Portraits and Stories of Native American Women
Exhibition by Matika Wilbur In 2012, critically acclaimed photographer and social documentarian Matika Wilbur (Tulalip & Swinomish) sold her belongings and set out on the road to launch Project 562, a […]
Jac Trautman: The Specter of the Young and Indigenous
Jac Trautman is a photographer and artist from Seattle and a member of the Duwamish tribe. With this series of seven photographs, Trautman takes a single exposure with multiple projected […]
1968: The Year That Rocked Washington
The year was 1968. Change was in the air. Everywhere. From Saigon to Seattle, Paris to Pasco. On college campuses, the campaign trail and evergreen peaks, Washingtonians were spurred to […]
Votes for Women: A Portrait of Persistence
The story of women’s suffrage is a story of voting rights, of inclusion in and exclusion from the franchise, and of our civic development as a nation. In 2020, the […]
Anatomy of a Collection: Recent Acquisitions and Promised Gifts
Curated by Amy Chaloupka, Curator of Art To mark ten years since the Lightcatcher building’s construction, the Whatcom Museum celebrates the works of art welcomed into the permanent collection during […]
Whatcom Artist Studio Tour 2020 Virtual Showcase
For the past several years, the Museum has helped celebrate Whatcom County artists by providing a showcase of select artworks by those participating in the annual Whatcom Artist Studio Tour […]
Conversations Between Collections: The Smithsonian American Art Museum and the Whatcom Museum
The Whatcom Museum is pleased to kick off a five-year exhibition partnership with the Smithsonian American Art Museum, as we present three masterworks from one of the nation’s most treasured […]
Two Views: Photographs by Ansel Adams and Leonard Frank
Two countries – two photographers. This compelling collection of photographs presents two views of internment and incarceration in the early 1940s. The 1942 incarceration of people of Japanese descent in the […]
Righting a Wrong: Japanese Americans and World War II
Righting a Wrong poster exhibition traces the story of Japanese national and Japanese American incarceration during World War II and the people who survived it. Young and old lived crowded […]
Geometry and Color: Sonia Delaunay and Bellingham Public School Students
As part of their distance learning materials, local students were asked to make artwork in the style of influential, Paris-based artists Robert and Sonia Delaunay. While the Delaunays’ works have […]