Cantor Arts Center
328 Lomita Drive at Museum Way
Stanford, CA 94305-5060
Phone: 650-723-4177
This exhibition proposes that the Anthropocene is not one singular narrative, but rather a diverse and complex web of relationships between and among humanity, industry, and ecology.
This video, featuring acclaimed jingle dancer Sarah Ortegon performing to the song “Sisters” by The Halluci Nation, pays homage to the matriarchal roots of many Indigenous communities and the healing power of art.
This exhibition showcases recent acquisitions to the Cantor Arts Center's collection and explores how these works expand our understanding of home. By offering diverse perspectives and experiences, this grouping of works suggests that art itself can serve as a meaningful dwelling place.
This collections-based, single gallery exhibition focuses on a typically overlooked part of many objects such as vessels, cutlery, weapons, hand mirrors, and so on: the handle.
This focused exhibition explores Asawa’s intimate relationship with clay and offers a new context with which to understand her diverse body of work.
A Thursday night music series featuring musicians and sound artists from the Bay Area and beyond. Programmed in conjunction with the exhibition Second Nature, Forms & Frequencies is an unforgettable experience that resonates with all your senses.