Category: Exhibit

Automaton—Live & Unplugged

There's no I in automaton, so don't be Robotic. We'll go through the Process, and make magic with brilliant Automation.

April 27, 2025May 11, 2025

Open Mic at Skybar

You'll need not eyes, nor ears, nor nose, for you will feel when Skybar is beneath your toes. Further instructions await you there.

April 26, 2025May 11, 2025

Palm Reading

We'll need all of thee, if we're to wave that tall tree. We'll then compare, one common, one rare.

April 13, 2025May 11, 2025
Stories From Pieces

Stories From Pieces

This rotating exhibit challenges the idea that meaning should be confined to an individual work. Instead, new meanings emerge between works, where pieces placed together create a narrative that is richer, deeper, and more alive than any one alone.

March 14, 2025May 11, 2025
Carol’s Couture

Carol’s Couture

Can we hold the fabric of time? Not exactly, but not entirely incorrect either.

June 18, 2024May 11, 2025
The Winged Jellyfish

The Winged Jellyfish

The original Winged Jellyfish specimen, along with a beautifully bound edition of our short story, The Winged Jellyfish, was carefully packed and returned to the Harn Museum of Art in Gainesville, Florida.

But let’s take a step back...

May 18, 2024May 11, 2025
After the Curtain Calls

After the Curtain Calls

This exhibit tells of a story that is about as magical as stories come, and it all started with a single brush stroke some 4,352 miles away.

April 16, 2024May 11, 2025
Songbird Sing–Along

Songbird Sing–Along

The morning atmosphere creates a temperature inversion, trapping cooler air near the ground beneath a layer of warmer air. This inversion reduces turbulence, allowing sound waves to travel farther and more clearly—a perfect stage, but perhaps this isn’t the only reason we hear nature’s little performers at this hour.

April 2, 2024May 11, 2025
Clear Obsessions

Clear Obsessions

Harvesting some ice is a great way to start the day. A chip off the old block of crystal clear ice—none of that cloudy rubbish from your automatic ice maker—with a beautiful purpose-built tool harkens back to days before household refrigeration was commonplace. This was not all that long ago. In the 1930s only 8% of American homes had a refrigerator, and along with it one of their first power cords to manage (foreshadowing tales of the great lengths La Voliera goes through to manage cords).

March 14, 2009May 11, 2025
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