Jul 01 2020
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Dec 19 2020
The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

The Day After Tomorrow: Art in Response to Turmoil and Hope

Presented by Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art at Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art

July 1 - December 19, 2020
Our new reality is profoundly different than it was six months ago. The 2020 pandemic, COVID-19, has swept the world, and in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, we have seen unprecedented civil unrest calling for racial equality. What will these dilemmas leave in their wake? The Museum hopes to engage the community in these issues, ones that have changed our lives in unprecedented ways.

One of the central galleries in the exhibition is a Community Response Space designed to elicit and give expression to the personal feelings, fears, and hopes for the future that have arisen for individuals in the community over the course of the last several months. This space, with the contribution of Utah artists, will undergo transformations over the course of the exhibition. Also included in the space is an interactive display through which you may share your personal emotional journey throughout the past few months.

Currently featured in the Community Response Space is a series of 30 portrait photographs by photographer and USU professor of Hispanic Studies J.P. Spicer-Escalante. Entitled The Love in the Time of Coronavirus Project, the exhibition documents the power of personal relationships amid the current health crisis.

The Day After Tomorrow is divided into three themes. A Better Tomorrow focuses on transcendence, alternate realities, the divine, afterlife, and bliss. A Worse Yesterday comprises works of art that address events that have shaken the world and thrown it into crises such as world wars, nuclear proliferation, AIDS, genocide, racism, and immigration. Awry Ecosystem focuses on art by artists concerned with the environment and how humans are changing it.

The Day After Tomorrow is largely drawn from NEHMA’s permanent collection and contains many works of art that have not been exhibited before by living and deceased artists from California, Oregon, Utah, and Washington, as well as prior USU visiting professors.

This exhibition and programming have been made possible through the support of the Utah Division of Arts and Museums.

Admission Info

We are now offering optional online reservations because Museum attendance is limited to 60 visitors at a time.

FREE admission
Suggested donation: $5.00

Phone: 435-797-0163

Email: nehma@usu.edu

Dates & Times

2020/07/01 - 2020/12/19

Additional time info:

NEHMA Hours:

Sunday - Monday: Closed
Tuesday: 10am – 5pm
Wednesday: 10am – 5pm
Thursday: 10am – 5pm
Friday: 10am – 7pm
Saturday: 10am – 3pm

Members-Only Hours:

Every first Friday of the month, 5 – 7pm

Location Info

Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art

650 North 1100 East, Logan, UT 84322

Parking Info

NEHMA has a limited number of free parking spaces located just north of the Performance Hall. Please park in stalls labeled "Museum Visitor" and notify visitor services upon your arrival. See the map below for additional parking options and note that USU lots are strictly enforced until 5PM. With few exceptions, USU lots are generally open to all on weekends. Public Transportation: ride Cache Valley Transit routes 1, 4 or CVN to visit NEHMA. Use the Fine Arts stop (eastbound) or Richards Hall (westbound) on E 700 N and walk toward the Performance Hall. Visit www.cvtdbus.org for more information.