Below are the past exhibitions at Mint Museum Randolph and Mint Museum Uptown.
Mint Museum UPTOWN
Dec 1 2018-Aug 18 2019
The Mint Museum’s first large-scale exhibition to explore the dynamic medium of collage.Mint Museum UPTOWN
Oct 27 2018-Apr 7 2019
In his delicately rendered sculptures Michael Sherrill seeks to elicit a sense of wonder from viewers, and to make them see things fresh.Mint Museum RANDOLPH
Oct 7 2018-Apr 28 2019
This exhibition introduces visitors to a dynamic and diverse dress tradition and the increasingly interconnected fashion worlds that it inhabits.Mint Museum RANDOLPH
Apr 29 2018-Aug 19 2018
RECENTLY EXTENDED: A look at the legendary designer's influences.Mint Museum RANDOLPH
Feb 7 2018-Jul 29 2018
Selected playbills and photographs from The Mint Museum Archives of Drama Guild productions directed by Dorothy Masterson.Mint Museum UPTOWN
Dec 8 2017-Jan 21 2018
A collaborative project between art teachers at Butler High School and Barringer Academic Center.Mint Museum UPTOWN
Oct 28 2017-Jun 17 2018
Develar y detonar (Reveal and Detonate) features the powerful, thought-provoking work of more than 40 of Mexico’s leading photographers.Mint Museum RANDOLPH
Oct 14 2017-Feb 4 2018
Focused on 21st century long gowns, from cocktail attire to wedding dresses, this exhibition highlights the meticulous craftsmanship, attention to detail, and fine materials characteristic of couture.Mint Museum UPTOWN
Sep 23 2017-Jun 3 2018
Exploring the theatrical costume designer’s work from 2007 to today, this exhibition ranges from 'Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella' to the television specials 'Grease Live!' and 'The Rocky Horror Picture Show: Let’s Do the Time Warp Again.'Mint Museum UPTOWN
Nov 30 2016-Jan 26 2018
Like Shishmaref is a sixteen-minute film produced in 2016 by Charlotte-based artist Marek Ranis. Ranis utilizes a wide range of media to create portraits of our rapidly changing natural environment, emphasizing the complex issues that have come to challenMint Museum RANDOLPH
Jan 2 2012-Sep 2 2018
The works presented here come from the primary mask-producing regions of Mexico where dance performances commonly accompany religious rituals and civic events.Mint Museum RANDOLPH
Jan 2 2010-Sep 2 2018
This exhibition features Maya traditional clothing, including fashions of the Kaqchikel, Ixil, K’iche’, Mam, Tz’utujil, Chuj, Awakatek, Jakaltek and Poqomchi’ from Guatemala, and Tzotzil and Tzeltal from Chiapas, Mexico.