Museums and exhibits have varying schedules; please callfor exact days, hours and prices.
A-SPACE , 4722 Baltimore Ave., 215-727-0882. THE OTHER SEPTEMBER 11TH, Features work by Philadelphia-based artists commemorating the murder of Chilean musician Victor Jara by agents of Pinchet in 1973. The show will explore the word "terrorism" and its most recent uses to describe attacks by a stateless group. Runs through Sept. 20.
ABINGTON ART CENTER , 515 Meetinghouse Rd., Jenkintown, 215-887-4882. INSIDE/OUTSIDE: HABITAT, Features sculptures by several artists including Brandon Ballengee, Austin Thomas and Simon Draper. The works depict concepts and questions regarding the welfare of human and non-human habitats, as well as the interdependancy of all species and their habitats. Runs through Nov. 24. MAGICAL REALISM, Features paintings mixing fantasy and reality by Marilyn Holsing, Susana Viola Jacobson, Steve Kenny, Deirdre Murphy, Walter Benjamin Smith and Aaron Delamatre. Runs through Nov. 24.
ACADEMY OF NATURAL SCIENCES , 19th St. & the Parkway, 215-299-1000. BUTTERFLIES!, Features dozens of types of butterflies from around the world. Ongoing. AMAZON VOYAGE: VICIOUS FISHES AND OTHER RICHES, Features live fish from the world's most biologically diverse river. Runs through Dec. 31. THE COMPLEAT HERBAL, Features medical botany publications from as early as the 16th century. Runs through Dec. 31.
ADOLPH AND ROSE LEVIS SPORTS MUSEUM , 401 S. Broad St., 215-446-3032. PERMANENT EXHIBIT, Features memorabilia from inductees into the Philadelphia Jewish Sports Hall of Fame. Ongoing.
ADVENTURE AQUARIUM , 1 Riverside Drive, Camden, NJ, 856-365-3311. WEST AFRICAN RIVER EXPERIENCE, Features two massive Nile hippos (3,000 pounds each), porcupines and more than 20 species of African birds in a free-flight aviary. Ongoing. SHARK REALM, Features a 40-foot walk-through shark tunnel and 550,000-gallon tank, which contains more than 20 sharks and 850 other fierce sea creatures. Ongoing.
ALLENTOWN ART MUSEUM , 5th & Court sts., Allentown, 610-432-4333. RHYTHMIC COILS, Features basketry by Pennsylvania native Debora Muhl. Her baskets are made using traditional Native American techniques and materials, but also challenge established boundaries. Runs through Nov. 18.
AMERICAN PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY , 104 S. 5th St., 215-440-3400. UNDAUNTED: FIVE AMERICAN EXPLORERS, Features exhibits on five explorers with Philadelphia connections: naturalist painter John Audobon, Arctic explorer Elisha Kane, freshwater ecologist Ruth Patrick, specimen collector Titian Peale and astronomer, surveyor and inventor David Rittenhouse,. Runs through Dec. 28.
AMERICAN SWEDISH HISTORICAL MUSEUM , 1900 Pattison Ave., 215-389-1776. BUILDING A VIEW, Features work by contemporary Swedish artist Madeleine Hatz. This multimedia exhibit focuses on oil paintings, but also includes music, videos and photographs. Runs through Jan. 13.
ART IN CITY HALL , City Hall, Broad & Market sts., 2nd & 4th floors, 215-686-2803. ART OF THE CITY, Features photographs and mixed-media work by 39 Philadelphia-based artists who are inspired by the city. Runs through Oct. 5.
THE ARTS SCENE , 530 E. Union St., West Chester, 610-644-6555. PAINTING, A PASSIONATE AND MADDENING DANCE, Features 40 abstract paintings by West Chester-based artist Erica Brown, who experiments with encaustic, acrylic and mixed media. Runs through Oct. 6.
ATLANTIC CITY ART CENTER , Boardwalk & New Jersey Ave., Atlantic City, NJ, 609-347-5837. TOUCHING THE VOID, Features work by abstract expressionists Alan Soffer, Libbie Soffer, Sandy Neiman Lovitz, Antonio Puri and Arthur Secunda, who use vibrant colors and rich textures to explore spatial relationships and the complexity of human emotion. Runs through Sept. 30.
ATWATER KENT MUSEUM , 15 S. 7th St., 215-685-4830. A GREAT COMPANY IN A GREAT CITY, Features highlights from a collection of etchings, lithographs and engravings many of which reference important events in Philadelphia history recently donated to the museum by the Insurance Company of North America. Runs through Dec. 1.
BAHDEEBAHDU , 309 Cherry St., 215-627-5002. BLISS, Features work by Rebecca Pulver, Schuyler Blanchard, Robert Aiosa, Beth Beverly, Erin Boyd, Kathy Pulver, Irene Sfakianos, Linda Smythe, Sarah Pulver and Ira Blanchard. Runs through Oct. 3.
BARTRAM'S GARDEN , 54th St. & Lindbergh Blvd., 215-729-5281. LOOKING OUT, LOOKING IN, Features paintings by Ed Bronstein, who has been painting in and around the garden for seven years. Runs through Sept. 27.
BATTLESHIP NEW JERSEY , Camden Waterfront, NJ, 856-966-1652. CAMDEN'S NY SHIPBUILDING CORP., Features the Amateur Radio Station, which gives patrons the opportunity to communicate with museum shops all over the world. Ongoing.
BRANDYWINE RIVER MUSEUM , US Rt. 1, Chadds Ford, 610-388-2700. CAPTURING NUREYEV: JAMES WYETH PAINTS THE DANCER, Features paintings and drawings of Rudolf Nureyev as captured by James Wyeth. Also on display are costumes, sketchbooks and memorabilia. Ongoing. FLIGHTS INTO FANTASY, Features nearly 100 drawings and paintings by famous illustrators of the 19th and 20th centuries, including Arthur Rackham, Edmund Dulac, Kay Nielsen, Jessie Smith, W.W. Denslow, Erest Shepard, Ludwig Bemelmans, Dorothy Lahtrop and E. Boyd Smith. Runs through Nov. 18.
CHAPTERHOUSE CAFE & GALLERY , 620 S. 9th St., 215-238-2626. ALLISON L. NITCH AND MARTIN WITTFOOTH, Features surrealist paintings of bears, wolves and other animals in combat. Runs through Nov. 30.
CHELTENHAM CENTER FOR THE ARTS , 439 Ashbourne Rd., Cheltenham, 888-715-5589. THROUGH THE LENS, Features photographs by Art Brener, Melvin Chappell, Robert Cassway, Diana Hochner, Deb Hughes, Caryn Koffman, Aaron Miller, Gene Pembroke, Mickie Rosen, Neal Siegel, Robert Wentzel and the late Emanual Weiss. Runs through Oct. 6.
CHERRY HILL LIBRARY , 1100 N. Kings Highway, Cherry Hill, NJ, 856-667-0300. ADORNMENT, Features jewelry by members of the South Jersey Bead Society. Runs through Oct. 12.
DELAWARE ART MUSEUM , 2301 Kentmere Pkwy., Wilmington, DE, 302-571-9590. THE CULTIVATED EYE: BRANDYWINE VALLEY PHOTOGRAPHERS, Features nature photography by regional artists who capture the unfamiliar in our everyday world. Runs through Oct. 23. IN COMPANY WITH ANGELS, Features seven eight-foot-tall stained glass windows created by Louis Comfort Tiffany. The restored windows depict angels and have been hidden away in garages and basements for the past 37 years. Runs through Dec. 31.
DELAWARE CENTER FOR THE CONTEMPORARY ARTS , 200 S. Madison St., Wilmington, DE, 302-656-6466. THE ADMINISTRATOR, Features interactive installation pieces by Michael Aurbach, who uses satire and caustic wit to challenge those in positions of higher authority and expose abuses of power. Runs through Sept. 23. REVOLUTION, Features several 24-hour long, single shot films by Ben Whitehouse that document the earth's revolution from different locations. Also on display are stylized paintings by Whitehouse inspired by the footage. Runs through Jan. 6. SYMBIOSIS, Features ceramic pieces by Dale Shuffler, who reorganizes shapes, patterns and forms found in plants, insects and flowers in his exploration of the natural worldís interrelations. Runs through Nov. 4. PAULA CAMENZIND, Features stoneware and porcelain pieces by Paula Camenzind, who focuses first on the pot and then on surface decor. Her work is significantly influenced by traditional Chinese ceramic design. Runs through Oct. 31.
DELAWARE COLLEGE OF ART AND DESIGN , 600 N. Market St., Wilmington, DE, 302-622-8000. ARTISTS OURSELVES, Features work by the faculty and staff of Delaware College of Art and Design. Runs through Oct. 22.
EAST AFRICA RESOURCE AND STUDY CENTER , 3809 Pearl St., 215-382-3191. PERMANENT COLLECTION, Features artifacts from sub-Saharan environments, including Ethiopia, Somalia, Eritrea, Sudan, Uganda, Kenya and Tanzania. Ongoing.
FABRIC WORKSHOP AND MUSEUM , 1222 Arch St., 215-568-1111. SELECTIONS, Features mixed-media work from the permanent collection by Louise Bourgeois, Mona Hatoum, Kiki Smith, William Wegman, Isaac Julien and Iran De Espirito Santo. Runs through Sept. 29. STOREFRONT, Features a window installation by Mark Bradford and Juan Carlos Avendano, who use photographs and unfinished wood beams to create the illusion of an interior space under construction. Runs through Sept. 26.
FRANKLIN INSTITUTE , 20th St. & the Parkway, 215-448-1200. THE GIANT HEART, Features a gigantic walk-through model of a human heart. Ongoing. TUTANKHAMUN AND THE GOLDEN AGE OF THE PHAROAHS, Features 50 artifacts from the tomb of Tutankhamun, as well as 70 more from other rulers of the Golden Age. Runs through Sept. 30.
GERM BOOKS & GALLERY , 308 E. Girard Ave., 215-423-5002. ONEIRIC IMPERIUM, Features a sound installation and street art project by Bood Samel, which transports visitors to an apocalyptic world where post-industrial noise, neo-folk, black metal and Satanism interweave and intermingle. Runs through Sept. 30.
GERMANTOWN HISTORICAL SOCIETY , 5501 Germantown Ave., 215-844-0514. AT HOME IN GERMANTOWN, 1750-1900, Features period domestic objects, including furniture, pottery, porcelain, silver, metalwork, tableware, kitchenware, personal hygiene items, needlework, children's games and toys. Ongoing.
GROUNDS FOR SCULPTURE , 18 Fairgrounds Rd., Hamilton, NJ, 609-586-0616. REMINISCENCE, Features contemporary weavings, glassworks, paintings and sculptures that reference the tradition-oriented world of domestic art. Together, they honor the exhibition space's former role as part of the New Jersey State Fairgrounds. Runs through Sept. 23. SCULPTOR OF GLASS, Features galss works by Richard Jolley, a contemporary pioneer in the medium known for making line drawings on curved glass surfaces. The exhibition is divided into categories that mirror various stages of his career. Runs through Sept. 23.
HAGLEY MUSEUM & LIBRARY , 298 Buck Rd., Wilmington, DE, 302-658-2400. SURPRISING ARTISTRY, Features watercolor paintings by Francis B. Crowninshield of each of the three homes and gardens where he and his wife, Louise du Pont Crowninshield, lived. Runs through Dec. 31. HAGLEY AT 50: EXPLODING WITH HISTORY, Features photographs and artifacts following the history of Hagley from its humble beginnings as an abandoned gunpowder mill. Runs through Dec. 30.
HARRITON HOUSE , 500 Harriton Rd., Bryn Mawr, 610-525-0201. KEEPING UP WITH THE JONESES, Features an interactive exhibit that tells the story of the Welsh in the U.S., beginning with the arrival of the first settlers during colonial times. Runs through Nov. 30.
HIGHER GROUNDS COFFEE SHOP , 631 N. 3rd St., 215-922-3745. THE ADVENTURES OF OREO BOY AND WIGGA MOUTH, Features postcard-sized works by Michale Adrion chronicling the comic adventures of best friends Oreo Boy (a white-acting black man) and Wigga Mouth (a black-acting white man). Runs through Oct. 29.
HUGH MOORE PARK , 30 Centre Square, Easton, 610-559-6613. JOSIAH WHITE CANAL BOAT, Features tools used to make canal boats, old vessels and the cargo that the boats carried. Rides on the canal boat are also available. Ongoing.
INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART , 118 S. 36th St., 215-898-7108. ENSEMBLE, Features sculpture pieces and interactive installations by Harry Bertoia, Yoko Ono, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Terry Adkins, Doug Aitken, Noah Sheldon, Evan Holloway, Jon Kessler, Angela White, Yoshi Wada, Dennis Oppenheim, Jim Hodges, Martin Creed and Paul Ramirez, among others. Runs through Dec. 16. BETWEEN US, Features photographs by Philadelphia-based artist Eileen Neff, whose work charts the modern critical shift from camera to computer. Runs through Dec. 16. JAY HEIKES, Features an installation composed of drawings, a cement and brass bed of nails, a digital cuckoo clock and a stylized rat trap.The entire project is inspired by a joke about an impatient pirate and his snarky parrot. Runs through Dec. 16. FLY THROUGH, Features an installation by Linda Taalman and Alan Koch, which is based upon their iT House, an aluminum and glass "kit house" that has been produced and installed on several sites in California. Vinyl graphic "outfits" by Jim Iserman, Liam Gillick, Sarah Morris and Renee Petropoulos will cover the windows. Runs through Dec. 16.
JINXED CLOTHING , 620 S. 4th St., 215-978-5469. GROUP SHOW, Features new work by Philly's own Isaac Bushkin, Connecticut stencil artist Win Vitkowsky and Maryland artist Adam Weir. Runs through Sept. 24.
LA SALLE UNIVERSITY ART MUSEUM , Olney Hall, 20th St. & Olney Ave., 215-951-1221. WHICH ONE ARE YOU?, Features large-scale wall paintings by muralist David McShane, which explore intimate questions about family and faith. Runs through Dec. 7.
LAVA SPACE , 4134 Lancaster Ave., 215-387-6155. ART AT LAVA, Features installations by Harmony Thompson, Zoe Cohen, Bilwa, Elysa Voshell, JJ Tiziou, Mary Tasillo, Cecily Anderson, Sarah Phillips, Jodi Netzer and Dominic Lepore. Works include wheat-pasted posters, murals, tile mosaics, site-specific sculptures and a solar-powered installation. Runs through Nov. 30.
MENNONITE HERITAGE CENTER , 565 Yoder Rd., Harleysville, 215-256-3020. AS LARGE AS PALACES, Features barn re-creations, historical photographs and diagrams of architecture in celebration of German barns in Pennsylvania. Runs through Oct. 30.
MERCER MUSEUM , 84 S. Pine St., Doylestown, 215-345-0210. DOLLS FROM THE ATTIC, Features antique collections of dolls and dollhouses. Ongoing.
MICHENER ART MUSEUM , 138 S. Pine St., Doylestown, 215-340-9800. FIRE AND ICE, Features paintings of soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan by Marine Corps "combat artist" Michael Fay. A reservist from Virginia, Fay is one of just three such artists in the Marines. Runs through Oct. 21. SOLDIER, Features photographic portraits by Suzanne Opton of men and women recently returned from military tours of Iraq or Afghanistan. Their effect is stiking. Runs through Oct. 21. STONE CARVINGS, Features abstract stone sculptures by Roger Loos in this outdoor display. Runs through Oct. 21. EXCURSIONS, Features two videos ("The Geosophist's Tears" and "Rotary Almanac") by video artist Peter Rose, who splices and superimposes nature footage in confusing, entrancing ways to make viewers think about how they perceive land. Runs through Nov. 25. THE DISPASSIONATE BODY, Features work by American realist painter Philip Pearlstein, including sixteen large nude paintings. Runs through Jan. 8.
MICHENER ART MUSEUM-NEW HOPE , 500 Union Square Dr., New Hope, 215-340-9800. CREATIVE BUCKS COUNTY, Features the work of visual artists, authors, playwrights, lyricists and composers who have lived and worked in Bucks County. Artists include Pearl S. Buck, Daniel Garber, Oscar Hammerstein II, Dorothy Parker, Jean Toomer and Charles Scheeler. Ongoing. GERSHWIN TO GILLESPIE: PORTRAITS IN AMERICAN MUSIC, Features 50 photographic portraits of composers and musical performers such as George Gershwin, Dizzy Gillespie, Leonard Bernstein, B.B. King, Frank Sinatra, Janis Joplin and Bob Dylan. Photographers include Edward Steichen, Annie Leibovitz, Ansel Adams and Art Kane. Runs through Oct. 7.
MORRIS ARBORETUM , 100 Northwestern Ave., 215-247-5777. LIVING FOSSIL: METASEQUOIA, Features viewing platform sculptures that allow visitors to experience ancient trees from their lower canopy branches. Ongoing. GARDEN RAILWAY DISPLAY, Features 12 different miniature rail lines, two cable cars and nine bridges. The landscape around it is carefully constructed out of all natural materials. Runs through Oct. 8.
MUGSHOTS COFFEEHOUSE , 110 Cotton St., 215-482-3964. MIKE COLL, Features new work by the local photographer and woodworker, including hours-long exposures that experiment with the use of lasers and the movement of the sky's lights. Runs through Sept. 30.
MUGSHOTS COFFEEHOUSE , 21st St. & Fairmount Ave., 215-232-1797. SCREENS 'N' SPOKES ART SHOW, Features screenprints by rock poster artists in celebration of art, bikes and the community they inspire. Proceeds benefit the Screens 'N' Spokes team in the National Multiple Sclerosis Society Shore Bike Ride. Runs through Sept. 30.
NATIONAL CONSTITUTION CENTER , Independence Mall, 525 Arch St., 215-409-6600. THE STORY OF WE THE PEOPLE, Features rare historical artifacts, including a letter sent by George Washington to Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt's "Rough Riders" jacket and items pertaining to Lincoln's assassination. Ongoing.
NATIONAL LIBERTY MUSEUM , 321 Chestnut St., 215-925-2800. VOYAGE THROUGH FAITH, Features wall-sized images that convey Biblical stories and a trilogy of Marc Chagall oil paintings of crucial aspects of the Muslim, Christian and Jewish traditions. Runs through Nov. 1.
NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN JEWISH HISTORY , Independence Mall, E. 55 N. 5th St., 215-923-3811. FORSHPEIS: A TASTE OF JEWISH AMERICANA, Features almost 10,000 items meant to capture the daily lives of American Jews from the 1880s to the present, with emphasis on food and food practices. Included are deli menus, matzo ball recipes and bar mitvah cake designs. Ongoing.
NOYES MUSEUM OF ART , 733 Lily Lake Rd., Oceanville, NJ, 609-652-8848. IMPRESSIONS OF THE SHORE, Features paintings by Philadelphia native Paul Keene created over a period of 35 years, including his "Cape May," "Sky Window" and "Slave Ship" series. Runs through Nov. 11. SIGNATURE ARTIST EXHIBITION, Features work by 16 New Jersey artists including Rea Smith, Alex Alampi and Phyllis London. This is the second of three annual exhibitions of the museum's signature artist members, and displays the works of artists from Camden, Cumberland, Burlington, Essex, Monmouth, Ocean and Salem counties. Runs through Oct. 28.
OLD FIRST REFORMED CHURCH , 4th & Race sts., 215-922-4566. THROUGH THE WINDOW: INSIGHTS INTO THE SPIRITUALITY OF AIDS, Features work by Lois Wilson, who uses salvaged windows and other materials to explore the spiritual insights of people living with HIV/AIDS. Runs through Oct. 19.
PENN MUSEUM OF ARCHAEOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY , 3260 South St., 215-898-4000. AMARNA, ANCIENT EGYPT'S PLACE IN THE SUN, Features artifacts from the era of Egypt's most famous ruler, King Tutankhamun. Included are statues, jewelry and religious amulets. Runs through Oct. 15. RIVER OF GOLD: PRECOLUMBIAN TREASURES FROM SITIO CONTE, Features almost 150 artifacts, including 120 Precolumbian gold objects such as hammered plaques, pendants, ornaments, bells, bangles and beads. These items were excavated by the Penn Museum in 1940 at the Rio Grande de Cocle. Also on display are site photos and drawings. Runs through Dec. 16.
PENNSYLVANIA ACADEMY OF THE FINE ARTS , 118-128 N. Broad St., 215-972-7600. OUT OF THE CHATEAU, Features work by local artist Charles Demuth from various stages of the his life and career. Runs through Dec. 9.
PHILADELPHIA ART ALLIANCE , 215 S. 18th St., 215-545-4302. ALONG THE WAY, Features large and small porcelain dolls by Korean-American artist SunKoo Yuh, which are inspired by his life and friends in Korea. Runs through Dec. 30. STRATUM, Features paintings by Tim Mcfarlane, who uses many layers of paint to create depth on the canvas and reveal the process of creation. Runs through Dec. 30. FALLING UPSTAIRS, Features paintings by Catherine Gontarek, which are inspired by objects, rooms and urban exteriors in her life. Runs through Dec. 30.
PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART , 26th St. & the Parkway, 215-763-8100. TIBETAN RITUAL ARTS, Features Tibetan-Buddhist ritual images and implements drawn from the museum's collection of Himalayan art, including a domestic alter. Runs through Nov. 20. PARTICULARS OF PLACE: PHOTO PORTFOLIOS FROM THE PERMANENT COLLECTION, Features images from the portfolios of Paul Caponigro, Paul Strand, John Divola, Laurie Brown, Alen MacWeeney and James Fee. Runs through Nov. 4. PARIS/NEW YORK, 1949-1959, Features paintings by Ellsworth Kelly from the 10 years over which he abandoned traditional painterly methods and began experimenting with the hard-edged, color field minimalism that came to define his career. Runs through Feb. 24. BOSCH AND BRUEGEL, Features detailed, colorful paintings by Rennaisance painters Hieronymus Bosch, Pieter Breugel and their followers. Most Bosch works focus on religious figures, paradise or damnation, while Breugel paid serious attention to the lives and customs of peasants. Runs through Nov. 23. CELEBRATING AMERICAN CRAFT, Features pieces from the museum's collection of contemporary American crafts. Runs through Sept. 30. PORTRAIT OF A PROFESSOR, Features the first in Thomas Eakins' series of portraits of physicians and scientists, which shows Jefferson Medical College professor Benjamin Rand immersed in work in his home office. The painting, which won great critical acclaim after its 1876 unveiling, is displayed alongside related works by Eakins and his contemporaries. Runs through May 31. NOTATIONS, Features paintings by three of postwar Germany's most important artists: Anselm Kiefer, Sigmar Polke and Gerhart Richter. Each struggled with questions of how to go about life and art in the wake of Germany's war crimes, and in doing so produced large bodies of work defined equally by conceptual complexity and technical mastery. Runs through Nov. 25. THE BOOK OF WAR, Features 25 detailed folios from the 1598 "Book of War," a manuscript memorializing the conquests of the Mughal empire of central Asia. This is the first time that these pages (owned by the Free Library of Philadelphia) have been displayed together. Runs through Dec. 9. CELEBRATE KOREA, Features 50 Korean screen paintings, hanging scrolls, pieces of furniture and ceramics acquired by the museum in the last decade. Runs through Sept. 23. A CONVERSATION IN THREE DIMENSIONS, Features rarely seen pieces from the museum's extensive sculpture collection, including work by Pablo Picasso and Anselm Kiefer. Runs through May 25. A PASSION FOR PERFECTION, Features costumes by award-winning Philadelphia fashion designers James Galanos, Gustave Tassell and Ralph Rucci. The pieces highlight the detail that is associated with Paris haute couture. Runs through March 9. ALFRED STIEGLITZ, Features work by the 20th-century artist. His photographs, donated by his wife Georgia O'Keefe, helped create the international photography collection now nearing 29,000 images. Runs through Jan. 31.
READING PUBLIC MUSEUM , 500 Museum Rd., Reading, 610-371-5850. ENGAGING HOLLYWOOD, Features photographic portraits of Hollywood actors, musicians, models and directors by celebrity photographer Andrew Orth. Runs through Sept. 30.
ROCKWOOD MUSEUM , 610 Shipley Rd., Wilmington, DE, 302-571-7776. REFLECTIONS FROM ANTIQUITY, Features interactive exhibits designed to convey a sense of what life in the 1930s was like for Wilmington's Bringhurst family. Included are documents, paintings, stone etchings, photographs and 3D simulations. Runs through Dec. 30.
SCHUYLKILL CENTER FOR ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATION , 8480 Hagy's Mill Rd., 215-482-7300. GREEN MACHINE, Features site-specific works exploring the relationship between art, nature and technology. Included is Chris Vecchio's Supplemental Shrubbery Sounds Source in which motion-sensitive modules are placed along the path and emit both "natural" and "man-made" sounds, altering the forest's atmosphere and encouraging questions about nature and technology. Runs through Oct. 30.
VISUAL ARTS CENTER OF NEW JERSEY , 124 Diamond Hill Rd., Berkeley Heights, NJ, 908-709-8820. A CELEBRATION OF TREES, Features photographs by Nancy J. Ori, who experiments with lighting and atmosphere in her work with landscapes and trees. Runs through Oct. 1.
WHEATON ARTS AND CULTURAL CENTER , 1501 Glasstown Rd., Millville, NJ, 856-825-2410. STANKARD STUDIO EXHIBITION, Features glass work by Paul Stankard, David Graeber, Katherine Stankard Campbell, Christine Stankard Kressley and Pauline Stankard Iacovino. Runs through Oct. 21.
WHEATON VILLAGE , 1501 Glasstown Rd., Millville, NJ, 609-825-6800. THE FIRES BURN ON, Features an exploration of 20 years of glassmaking in Millville and the impact of Millville's glass industry on World War II. Ongoing.
Comments
Be the first to comment on this article.