Past Exhibitions
December 1, 2023 - January 24, 2024
Digital Art Department
October 28, 2023 - February 11, 2024
image credit: Katie Schutte, Barn Doily (detail), 2023, Acrylic on board, 48 x 48, Courtesy of the artist
Distorted Recollections
October 21, 2023 - February 4, 2024
image credit: Roberta Condon,” American Pastoral 7 U,” 2020, Soft pastel on sanded paper, 36 x 43.5, Courtesy of the artist
Long Time Passing
October 21, 2023 - February 4, 2024
Image credit: Henry Matthiessen III, “Awakening,” 2018
Rural Life
RACHEL DEUTMEYER
Everything Fades
June 24, 2023 - October 15, 2023
Kris Mozena McNamer Gallery
RACHEL DEUTMEYER Everything Fades
Photographer Rachel Deutmeyer found that you can’t go home again—but that inaccessibility became a route to this powerful visual meditation on loss, change, and memory.
Deutmeyer, an assistant professor of photography at Carson-Newman University in Jefferson City, Tennessee, had originally set out to explore the small town in Dubuque County where she was raised, but she found she was unable to access the center of her memories: her childhood home. This absence rendered her familiar surroundings foreign, and the house became, in her project, a symbol of what we lose in the passage from youth to adulthood.
The 15 works on view momentarily suspend a landscape in constant change. Spring buds, shadows, sunlight, butterflies, and multiple exposures of the exteriors of houses photographed across the Midwest become reflections of not only the inexorable passage of time but the wavering quality of memory itself. “I edited and sequenced the images to construct a narrative that references a bygone time in my own life,” she wrote, “but they also address collective ideas of home, family, and loss,” a sentiment that turns this highly personal project into a universal one.
Deutmeyer’s work was first exhibited at DuMA in the 2019 Biennial, making Everything Fades both a homecoming and an evolution. “Change is often slow and unnoticed until it suddenly feels permanent and inevitable,” she reflected. “I found beauty in things that were changing, as we are all changing.”
View the Online Exhibition
Image credit: Rachel Deutmeyer, Trusting Aspiration, Spring 2023, 2023, Inkjet print on paper, 20×24 in., courtesy of the artist.
DuMA Biennial 2023
June 17, 2023 - October 8, 2023
Sponsored by
DuMA Biennial 2023
Welcome to the tenth edition of the DuMA Biennial, an exhibition founded in 2003 as a competitive, open-call opportunity for established and emerging artists in the heart of the Midwest.
The ethos of the Biennial is to reflect a moment in time, celebrate regional talent, and continue to build an artistic community. The selected works this year were chosen by juror Pamela Caserta Hugdahl (Executive Director of the Rochester Art Center) from a wide field of over 500 submissions. Hugdahl has assembled a survey that reflects the prominent styles, themes, and range of media she found. The exhibition features contemporary painting, sculpture, furniture, photography and more.
Through the works on view, digital content, and programs, the DuMA Biennial explores how the enormous changes in our social, cultural, and political environment emerge in the art created today by the artists among us.
View the Online Exhibition Guide
Image credit: Priscilla Steele, Magnum Amaryllis, 2022, mixed media on paper, 52.5×27.5 in., courtesy of the artist.
Clarke University Current Studio Work
June 1, 2023 - August 31, 2023
In the Lobby
Clarke University Current Studio Work
Dubuque Citywide
High School
Student Art Exhibition
April 5, 2023 - May 14, 2023
On display in the lobby
High school 2023
Featuring student work from Dubuque Senior High school, Hempstead High school, Wahlert Catholic High school, and alternative learning center program.
Tibi Chelcea
Randomly Accessed Memories
February 25, 2023 - June 11, 2023
Artist Support Provided By
Alliant Energy
Iowa Arts Council
National Endowment for the Arts
Tibi Chelcea
Iowa-based artist Tibi Chelcea combines his background in computer engineering with his artistic practice and Romanian heritage to create technologically-inspired, historically-grounded drawings, paintings, and digital and textiles works.
Chelcea’s drawings and paintings are inspired by electronic circuit board designs and explore the graphic potential of electronic symbols. His printed circuit boards pioneer new techniques for using electronic design software to create art. These works are manufactured using the same process as actual circuit boards but are not functional.
Chelcea’s textile works are part of an ongoing exploration of the connections between textile manufacturing and the electronics industry. His large textiles are inspired by Jacquard fabric. Historically, Jacquard looms influenced the development of computing. The punched cards that controlled the looms were used for decades in early electronic computers. His smaller weavings combine textile with circuit boards and introduce hand embroidery. The cross-stitching patterns he uses are based on electronic symbols and recall the traditional Romanian patterns that he saw in his grandparents’ home during his childhood in Romania.
Tibi Chelcea moved to the United States in 1997 and received his Ph.D. in computer science at Columbia University. He worked at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania before settling to Iowa. He is currently a software engineer in the agricultural industry and lives with his wife and two children in Ames.
Explore the Exhibition Online
Image credit: Tibi Chelcea, PCB Drawing #32, 2017, circuit board, 4 x 4 inches, Courtesy of the artist
Dubuque Citywide K-8
Student Art Exhibit
February 25, 2023 - March 31, 2023
Lobby
K-8 2023
A harbinger of spring, the annual K-8 exhibition features artwork by city elementary and middle school students, chosen by their teachers.
Learn more
Bill Farrell
Investigations with Clay
February 11, 2023 - June 4, 2023
Image credit: Bill Farrell, Popeye, 1970’s, glazed earthenware, 3 x 4.5 inches, Courtesy of the artist’s estate
Bill Farrell
This survey exhibition organized by the Dubuque Museum of Art and co-curated by Delores Fortuna and Tim Farrell highlights pioneering ceramic artist Bill Farrell’s significant contributions to the field of ceramics and his dedication to life-long creating and teaching.
Farrell received many honors and awards during his lifetime. In 1962, as an emerging artist, he was juried into the 22nd Syracuse Ceramic National at the Everson Museum in Syracuse, New York. He was a member of the National Council on Education in Ceramic Arts (NCECA) since its inception in 1966. He received a National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artists’ Fellowship award in 1981 for his Popeye series of sculptures.
After moving from Chicago to Galena, Illinois later in his career, Farrell maintained an active studio practice and could also be found at almost every car show in the region either as spectator or exhibitor. He was an influential presence in the area arts community. He helped found the popular Twenty Dirty Hands pottery tour. He was included in the first Voices from the Warehouse District exhibition in 2005 and co-curated the exhibition Innovations in Clay in 2015 at the Dubuque Museum of Art. Bill Farrell passed away on July 3, 2021. He lives on in the significant body of work he created and in his enduring legacy of non-traditional approaches to clay.
Explore the Exhibition Online
BLACK THREAD
JILL WELLS
January 15, 2023 - February 12, 2023
Sponsored by:
GreenState Credit Union
John Deere Dubuque Works
Jill Wells
As 4,000+ black butterflies glide from floor to ceiling, along every wall of the DuMA lobby, cascading from above and wheeling in reverence, the narrative begins in the installation BLACK THREAD by Des Moines artist Jill Wells. BLACK THREAD presents the pathways and journey of The Great Migration, one of the largest movements of people in United States history. In honoring African American History, BLACK THREAD acknowledges the sewing of the fabric of America done by countless African Americans throughout U.S. history. Additionally, BLACK THREAD raises questions about freedom, transformation, labor, and economy, while celebrating the virtue of fortitude.
View the Online Exhibition Guide
Photo credit: Jill Wells