Gallery Talk: All About That Smile with Bill Wallace
Join us at the Room of Wonders: A Worcester Wunderkammer exhibition for a gallery talk from Bill Wallace of the Museum of Worcester about the origins of the iconic Smiley Face.
Join us at the Room of Wonders: A Worcester Wunderkammer exhibition for a gallery talk from Bill Wallace of the Museum of Worcester about the origins of the iconic Smiley Face.
Meet Birgit Straehle, independent guest curator, for an insider's look at Room of Wonders: A Worcester Wunderkammer, this summer's exhibition at the Cantor Art Gallery.
Artist Michael Rosenstein will discuss the 4-channel sound piece he constructed for the Room of Wonders exhibition, followed by a series of improvisations where he and fellow improviser Stella Silbert will interact with the 4-channel sound piece.
Create your own Wunderkammer object with Room of Wonders curator Birgit Straehle in this Metal Leaf Application workshop, free and open to the public at the Cantor Art Gallery.
Room of Wonders artist Dan Hunt and Charles Ketter of the Plectrum Club will perform on and talk about 5 different guitars made by Hunt's DRH Guitars, joined by special guest soprano vocalist Nynez Lopez.
Room of Wonders artist Caelum Lam invites you to the gallery for an Artist Talk on his work and a Fabric Painting Workshop.
Join us for the closing reception of this summer's Room of Wonders exhibition at the Cantor Art Gallery.
Shakespeare's beloved play comes to The Prior in this co-presentation from Holy Cross' Scholarship in Action & Clark University’s Office of Global Engagement, directed by Martha Douglas-Osmundson and starring students of the Clark University-Hefei University of Technology Summer 2025 Program.
The Vietnamese Áo Dài in a Time of War explores the significance of Vietnam’s national costume—the áo dài—during the Vietnam War. Honoring the 50th anniversary of a conflict, the legacies of which continue to haunt us to this day, the exhibition highlights the contributions of Vietnamese women to politics, society, and culture.
This documentary tells the story of the Nipmuc/Native American identity of the land on which Holy Cross now sits, covering Nipmuc relations with colonial settlers and the Jesuit community from the 1500s to today. The film visits sites that will be familiar to students and community members and views them through a Native American perspective and through the stories they tell of the profound environmental changes to this area.