January 22–April 11, 2021
Buchwald-Wright Gallery, Gund Gallery
The Art of Trees reveals the many resonances, forms, and relationships of trees. Exploring themes of restoration and destruction, community and isolation, location and identity, and fragile temporalities, the artists featured in the exhibition experiment with a range of mediums, and even use trees as creative collaborators to express our essential and inseparable bond with these guardians of the earth. The Art of Trees invites an interdisciplinary dialogue about personal, local, and global relationships to the environment, while simultaneously drawing attention to interactions between trees themselves, the communities they form, and their resilience despite human interference.
Featuring: Nearby Voices
Nearby Voices bridges the gap between global and local environmental concerns by engaging with the art and voices of local community members. This special section of The Art of Trees exhibition offers artistic reflections on the local landscape as a shared point of witness and imagines trees as archives of commonly held stories and experiences that branch across generations of a community.
The Art of Trees is curated by a committee of Gund Associates, Kenyon faculty, and Gund Gallery staff who worked together in a collaborative, multi-year process to bring this project to life.
In honor of Valentine’s Day, there will be a new art display encouraging guests to celebrate the love in their lives – and share it to inspire fellow guests to feel the love this Valentine’s season. Guests are invited to participate by placing a sticky note for someone or something they love on the Post Your Love wall!
This art installation will be at the Food Court between next to Boost Mobile. It will be on display February 1, 2021 through March 1, 2021
Christina’s Hullabaloo Performing Art Theatre will be performing the Classic Musical Fairy Tale “The Little Mermaid”!”
Try-outs will take place Jan. 9 & 10 from 1-4pm
Showtimes will be February 19, 20, 26, & 27 at 7pm and February 27, 28, at 2pm.
Come sign your child(ren) up to play in the 2021 baseball season. This is for Teeball, Coach Pitch, Minors, Majors, and Babe Ruth.
It appears we have a mischievous leprechaun working out at the Dublin Community Recreation Center in preparation for the St. Patrick’s Day Reverse Parade on Saturday, March 13!
The inside scoop is that he is planning to run around Darree Fields to leave a trail of fun St. Patrick’s Day signs throughout the park.
- When: March 1–12, 2021
- Where: Darree Fields
- Time: During park hours (sunrise to sunset)
- Cost: Free to participate (register online to receive necessary program updates)
Do you have the luck of the Irish on your side to catch Dublin’s mischievous leprechaun?
If you are up for the challenge here is what you need to do:
- Register for the Leapin’ Leprechauns Park Hunt (no charge to participate!)
- From March 1-12, visit the park anytime during operating hours and find all the St. Patrick’s Day signage.
- Think you found all the signs? Submit your guess for the number of signs our mischievous leprechaun left behind. All information provided is optional and will enter you for a chance to win an AMAZING St. Patrick’s Day prize! (The winner will be notified by Monday, March 15.)
January 22–April 11, 2021
Buchwald-Wright Gallery, Gund Gallery
The Art of Trees reveals the many resonances, forms, and relationships of trees. Exploring themes of restoration and destruction, community and isolation, location and identity, and fragile temporalities, the artists featured in the exhibition experiment with a range of mediums, and even use trees as creative collaborators to express our essential and inseparable bond with these guardians of the earth. The Art of Trees invites an interdisciplinary dialogue about personal, local, and global relationships to the environment, while simultaneously drawing attention to interactions between trees themselves, the communities they form, and their resilience despite human interference.
Featuring: Nearby Voices
Nearby Voices bridges the gap between global and local environmental concerns by engaging with the art and voices of local community members. This special section of The Art of Trees exhibition offers artistic reflections on the local landscape as a shared point of witness and imagines trees as archives of commonly held stories and experiences that branch across generations of a community.
The Art of Trees is curated by a committee of Gund Associates, Kenyon faculty, and Gund Gallery staff who worked together in a collaborative, multi-year process to bring this project to life.
In honor of Valentine’s Day, there will be a new art display encouraging guests to celebrate the love in their lives – and share it to inspire fellow guests to feel the love this Valentine’s season. Guests are invited to participate by placing a sticky note for someone or something they love on the Post Your Love wall!
This art installation will be at the Food Court between next to Boost Mobile. It will be on display February 1, 2021 through March 1, 2021