WAUSAU — Monday, June 4 – Sunday, June 10

June 7  
Thursday 5:30 – 6:30 p.m.
Sculpture Garden Yoga
Rejuvenate through yoga in the serene setting of the sculpture garden, if weather permits. This outdoor-only session is led by a 5 Koshas Yoga and Wellness instructor. Register at www.5koshasyoga.com/ yoga/class-schedule. Bring a mat or blanket. Session will be cancelled if weather requires; watch the 5 Koshas Facebook page for updates.

June 7 Thursday 5:30 – 6:30 p.m.
Art 101 Faust Serigraphs
Puzzled, fascinated, intrigued? Join curator of collections Jane Weinke for a discussion about the process of serigraphy and Anne Senechal Faust’s stunning artworks featured in Dynamic Designs.

June 7 Thursday 5:30 – 7 p.m.
Hands-on Art
Drop in and create your own repurposed-wire sculpture.

On View through Aug. 26, 2018
“The World According to Federico Uribe”
Colombia-born, Miami-based artist Federico Uribe creates exuberant sculptures and immersive installations from everyday objects. Finding beauty in simple and sometimes startling materials, Uribe transforms objects from their original, utilitarian purposes. Deconstructed books morph into trees, disassembled leather saddles become horses, and bullet shell casings become bunnies.

New to the Collection
Experience newly acquired artwork by Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait, Frederick Stone Batcheller, Alexander Pope, Thomas Aquinas Daly, Karen Bondarchuk, Arthur Burdett Frost and Lynn Bogue Hunt.

On view through Feb. 17, 2019
From the Museum’s Collection
“Dynamic Designs: The Serigraphs of Anne Senechal Faust”
Anne Faust’s vibrant silk-screens affirm her mastery of this medium and a deep knowledge of and affinity for birds and their habitats. Named the Museum’s Birds in Art Master Wildlife Artist in 1999, she was the first woman and the first printmaker to receive this recognition.

On view through August 2018
“Fowl Play”  Decorative Duck Decoys
Duck decoys long have been used to lure waterfowl. Typically made of wood, these life-sized sculptures range from simple bird shapes to intricately carved and finely painted examples. Some are strictly utilitarian; others are sculptural works of art.

In the Sculpture Garden
“The Dance”
Inspired by the way the seasonal migration of sandhill cranes to their Wisconsin nesting grounds marks the passage of time, Boston artists­-The Myth Makers-Donna Dodson and Andy Moerlein, constructed 25-foot-tall sandhill cranes of Wausau-area saplings, on-site. (June 2016)