NIAGARA UNIVERSITY, NY.- The Castellani Art Museum of Niagara University invites the public to the opening of two major spring exhibitions: Human/Nature: Envisioning the Environment and USA250: Celebrating the American Vision.
Together, these exhibitions offer a timely and thought-provoking exploration of where we have beenand where we are headedinviting audiences to consider the intertwined futures of humanity, the environment, and the evolving American story. Through contemporary and historical works, the exhibitions engage themes of identity, responsibility, resilience, and imagination, asking visitors to reflect on the worlds we have shaped and the ones we are still creating.
Guest curated by Douglas Tewksbury, Ph.D., Human/Nature: Envisioning the Environment (February 26, 2026January 23, 2027) brings together seven artists whose work grapples with the complexities of living in an era defined by climate crisis, ecological uncertainty, and fractured realities. Rather than presenting nature as a distant backdrop, the exhibition positions the environment as the very medium through which human and nonhuman life unfolds. Through installation, painting, photography, and mixed media, artists Chantal Calato, Jeri Coppola, Simon Frank, Beili Liu, Alison Shields, Eszter Sziksz, and Dana Murray Tyrrell explore the tensions between care and consumption, awe and anxiety, despair and hope. Their work reflects on how memory, myth, data, and lived experience shape our understanding of the natural world and asks viewers to reconsider their relationship to both the planet and one another. The exhibition ultimately suggests that while the climate crisis has dismantled the illusion that humanity exists apart from nature, it also opens the possibility for more holistic and hopeful futures if collective will and imagination are engaged.
Opening concurrently, USA250: Celebrating the American Vision (March 2, 2026January 10, 2027) reflects on the United States as it approaches its 250th anniversary, inviting audiences to examine the nations ideals, contradictions, and enduring creative spirit. Drawn primarily from the Castellani Art Museums permanent collection, the exhibition features works by artists such as Romare Bearden, Penny Hudson, Robert Indiana, LeRoy Neiman, Louise Nevelson, Norman Rockwell, and Andy Warhol, alongside historical prints from the Charles Rand Penney Historical Niagara Falls Print Collection and photographs from CAMs Folk Arts collection. Together, these works offer a visual dialogue that connects national narratives with local heritage, exploring how artists across generations have defined, challenged, and reimagined the concept of the American Vision. Through depictions of people, landscapes, and the built environment, the exhibition reveals a complex portrait of the United Statesone marked by resilience, diversity, innovation, and the continual pursuit of a more perfect union.
By presenting these two exhibitions together, the Castellani Art Museum creates a powerful conversation between environmental futures and national histories, encouraging visitors to consider how responsibility to the planet and responsibility to one another are deeply intertwined. The April 9 opening invites the Niagara University campus and the broader Western New York community to gather in a shared space of reflection and dialoguerecognizing both the fragility and resilience that define our collective human story.