Hale Pua’s Paint-by-Number Lei Kits Offer an Artful Way to Relive Happy Memories
Paint of heart.
Departments
More
Connect With Us
The HONOLULU x Margaret Rice NFT collab, featuring the artwork displayed on our April issue cover, will open for bids this Thursday, April 21.
We spoke with the talented illustrator about her process.
HiSAM launches Passion On Display, a new artist-in-residence program.
Christopher Edwards, Kirk Kurokawa, Mari Sakamoto and other artists explore architecture and beyond.
Masami Teraoka, Lauren Trangmar, Sally French and others contribute never-before-seen works for display alongside some from the state’s collection.
Discover innovative ways to be inspired with Happenings at HiSAM and HiSAM Creates.
Gogh with the flow. Go ahead, make your own pun.
The traveling exhibition opens to the public on Friday, July 2, at the Hawai‘i Convention Center.
Punahou alumna Chloé Selarque’s intricate embroidery pieces capture the grand grooves of the Ko‘olau, the perky peaks of the Mokes and the wavering blues of the Pacific.
Register now for first access to tickets before they go on sale to the general public.
HiSAM’s exhibit specialist talks about being a steward for the arts, new mixed media works and her special connection with Yayoi Kusama.
The artist talks about his own work, the art community and finding balance in 2020.
The exhibition has expanded into the Hawai‘i State Art Museum’s former café and gift shop spaces.
The artwork in Hawai‘i State Art Museum’s latest exhibition transforms something all too familiar into inviting and dynamic pieces of art.
“Homes+Homeys” by Mori Hawai‘i explores what local creatives are doing while sheltering in place.
“Contemporary Landscapes: Li Huayi” features a revival of the traditional.
A sketch of Maui that began on a French ship in 1819 is back in the Islands because of a collector, an Australian book dealer and a secret donor.
Get ready to walk through interactive, botanical and LED art installations all over town. The Honolulu Biennial is back.
The museum includes work from the Art in Public Places Program, dedicated to acquiring, preserving and displaying works of art that relate to the Hawaiian Islands or the culture of its people.
The Honolulu Museum of Art is a treasure trove of Asian, European, Hawaiian, American and contemporary art.
Go ahead and start making room in your closet.
Since the early 1990s, the Hawaiian-Chinese UH Mānoa art school graduate has been creating sculptures and lamps from wood as well as recycled cardboard, X-ray film boxes and other discarded materials from his day job at The Queen’s Medical Center.