Virtual Exhibitions

The Peale is Baltimore’s Community Museum.

Located in downtown Baltimore, The Peale is open Thursdays to Sundays for in-person, self-guided tours, but you can visit select past exhibitions any time from the comfort of your home. Virtual exhibitions are open 24/7! As a Lab space, we are always open to feedback about your experience with our virtual and audio tours. Please don’t hesitate to reach out at info@ThePeale.org if have comments. 

Virtual exhibitions are made possible in part by support from PNC and by contributions to The Community Creators Fund at The Peale.

Explore

A museum gallery that features stained glass.

New Feature!

Through a Glass Darkly: Baltimore's Stained-Glass Makers

Curated by Linda Rabben, Through a Glass Darkly: Baltimore’s Stained-Glass Makers features works by local stained-glass makers and the launch of the first illustrated book on the social history of stained glass in Baltimore.

These accomplished artists combine creativity and technical virtuosity to design, fabricate, repair and restore art-glass windows, sculptures, mosaics and other objects for installation in homes, churches and public buildings in Baltimore and beyond. Inheritors of this traditional art form, they are also highly skilled innovators. 

A costume that has a denim top and a striped red and white flag-style skirt.

Posen x Posen x Posen

On view in summer of 2023, this show brings together the works of Stephen Alexandra, and Zac Posen, and explores the remarkable contributions they have made to the realms of art and fashion. 

A charicature of Donald Trump that shows a cut out where his heart would be.

Barbara Dale Retrospective

On view in summer of 2023, this exhibition details Barbara Dale’s artistic journey and showcases pottery as well as her line of alternative greeting cards, known for their wit and edginess. 

A theater set in a historic building features a red-curtained stage.

Single Carrot Theater

Check out the set of this popular Single Carrot theater production at the Peale. Set against the opulent background of 16th-century Versailles, Marie Antoinette and the Magical Negroes delves deep into the history of race.

Hundreds of paper butterflies on a the floor of room in a museum.

Kim Rice: Inheritance

Inheritance confronts racism head on. A compelling example of activism through art and a perspective rarely seen–a white artist specifically interrogating her privilege as a white person and the opportunities it’s afforded.

Dozens of yellow and white tags are displayed on a wall in a gallery.

Hostile Terrain (HT94)

Hostile Terrain 94 (HT94) is a participatory art project organized by the Undocumented Migration Project . The exhibition includes 3,200 handwritten toe tags that represent migrants who have died trying to cross the Sonoran Desert.

A view of a gallery space with white walls that shows colorful comic book covers on the walls.

The Amazing Black Man

By utilizing the format of the comic book, Kumasi J. Barnett’s highly acclaimed 2022 exhibition revolves around the concept of good and evil, asking the viewer to always question, consider and adapt our understanding of right and wrong.

Promo image of an exhibition that features a graphic of a colorful show set in a cartoon landscape.

Novus: A MICA Exhibition

NOVUS featured emerging multidisciplinary artists who are defining the future of art. Included installations, wearable art, and digital/virtual works. These artists urge the use of new strategies for creative interventions in daily life.

A man gestures as he stands in front of a white and teal colored wall with an exhibition title in the background.

Spaces of the Un-entitled

Devin Allen’s Spaces of the Un-Entitled  examines the remnants of lives uprooted or left behind. Allen contemplates the simple possessions that make a home as well as the forgotten and missed pieces of a life. 

A man with black glasses stands in front of a wall of red grafiti art in a museum gallery.

Adam Stab: Street, Life, Art

Adam Stab’s work is bold, gritty, and filled with exuberant color. Riding his skateboard, he was drawn to the streets and urban canyons at a young age. It  opened infinite possibilities for a kid searching for himself in a concrete jungle. 

Self-guided Audio Tours

Download the Smartify app, and use your phone to listen to these full tours, whether you’re onsite at The Peale, or on the go! You can also listen on SoundCloud. The Peale’s Soundcloud channel contains  1,300 stories–about everything from local art to stories about food to short documentaries created by students!

A black and white drawing of an abstract shape and lines.

Lee Boot: Abstracts & Artifacts

Media artist Lee Boot muses, “what if it were normal for artists to have careers working side-by-side, on equal footing, with the other researchers and policymakers who determine how we improve education, or public health, or how we catalyze economic development in our communities?” His abstract exploration is a marriage of art, science, and technology. Includes conversations with the artist.

Vintage photo of the Peale building around 1877.

Education Will Be Our Pride

From 1878 to 1889, the Peale building was part of a new public school system being developed in Baltimore to provide free education to African Americans in the city. Known as “Male and Female Colored School No. 1,” the building was the site of one of the first grammar schools in Baltimore’s Colored School system, and the first High School available to students of color in the State of Maryland.

Quilted Connections: Sisterhood in Cloth

Three members of the African American Quilters of Baltimore, Sandra Smith, Rosalind Robinson, and Glenda Richardson, have created quilts to thank and honor all those who supported the Peale’s renovations and reopening this year. This exhibition presents more of their work at the Peale from December 3-March 19, 2023. This exhibition was featured on WYPR radio!

An artwork that features rows and rows of grocery stores receipts hanging down in strips.

A Feast in the Desert: Food Insecurity in Baltimore

“A Feast In The Desert, ” curated by Alexis Tyson, shares the voices of four artists whose work reflects on the role food plays in strengthening our bonds and educating our community on food disparity in Baltimore. An intimate exhibition that showcases 4 artists across Baltimore – each offering a story of how food affects them. On view from November 8-January 29, 2023. 

A group of people hold small black and white portraits of themselves in a market space.

Peale Faces by Lauren Muney + Stories

Baltimore artist and participatory-history specialist Lauren Muney hand-created hundreds of custom silhouettes (profile portraits) of Baltimore City, Maryland, residents for long-term public installation at the Peale. Each sitter has a story. Hear some of those stories about life in Baltimore–both past and present–in this storytelling snapshot.

Very historical museum. Events are always changing, and they’re open to featuring new talent.

- Adrian Sharon

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