Arts + Literature Laboratory will hold an opening reception for new art exhibitions on Friday, March 13, 2026, from 6:00pm to 8:00pm. Free admission.
At 6:30pm there will be a performance by Blue Naga in Gallery 3.
Our latest round of exhibitions features artists Marilyn Prescott, Li Zhang, Blue Naga, Ellie Braun, and a group show featuring April Ogimaakwe Stone, Bomgiizhik (Isaac Murdoch), Melanie Ariens, Richard Jones, Shea Schachameyer, and Susan Simensky Bietila on all three floors of exhibition space.
All five exhibitions open March 3, and will remain on display through April 18, 2026.
In Rivering, Marilyn Prescott explores the lush forest environment surrounding the Fox River in NE Wisconsin. In an exhibit consisting of over 30 paintings and artist’s books, the artist has used her long walks as the springboard for large, heavily textured mixed media paintings. Monotype collage, Oriental papers, silk stripping and other experimental and eccentric media coalesce into abstract paintings that feature luminous, atmospheric backgrounds layered with hints of plants, animals, twigs, ice, snow.
Sita and Other Sisters is a 15–30 minutes live, multimodal performance by Blue Naga that weaves together poetry, embodied gesture, and audience participation. At its center is the figure of Sita, the heroine of the Ramayana epic, whose story has circulated across South and Southeast Asia in countless retellings. In Thailand, Sita has been reappropriated as a symbol of resistance in the #MeToo movement, an emblem for survivors who refuse to carry the burden of shame imposed upon them. Drawing from this lineage, Sita & Other Sisters transforms performance into ritual. The artist stages a burial, inviting the audience to grieve collectively—not only for Sita, but for all women who have been subjected to violence, disbelief, and erasure.
Li Zhang's As the World Touches Us brings together two-dimensional silk paintings and three-dimensional ceramic works inspired by the natural world and quiet emotional experiences. Plants, growth, decay, and the passing of time serve as starting points for the work. Some paintings turn inward, tracing moments of loss, growth, and parting, where emotional shifts unfold quietly alongside natural change. Together, silk and ceramic create a conversation between delicacy and solidity, surface and form. As the World Touches Us invites viewers to slow down and notice how the natural world quietly touches us, leaving lasting impressions on both material and self.
For the Love of Water is a grassroots resistance themed art exhibition to educate and inspire people to work collaboratively to protect the water. The show is a collaboration between Great Lakes artists curated by Shea Schachameyer and Susan Simensky Bietila, whose work connects to water, whether through the materials and methods used or the stories told. Water connects us all, and as such, so do the threats posed by extractive industries like mining and pipelines. By bringing the perspective of six different artists whose work is intimately connected to water, this exhibition encourages you to think about your connection to the water and presents a call to action.
Ellie Braun's recent work has centered on the idea of imagining a future for the people, by the people. Combining work with commentary about social issues with colorful and bright visuals, Braun envisions a world vastly different from the one we are currently living in. Sanctuary Dreams presents an exploration of this idea in the context of community building. Braun examines the places and practices people turn to in order to work towards a bright future -- whether spiritual, religious, or cultural in one way or another -- and asks, what does creation and dreaming look like in a time of crisis? The exhibition reflects Braun's ongoing commitment to making art accessible to everyone and her deep engagement with community-based artistic practice.










