Skip to main content

Past Exhibitions

Browse the chronological list of past exhibitions at the Saint Louis University Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCRA), or search for a specific exhibition. Click “View” for more information about an exhibition. If you need further information about an exhibition, please contact us.

To See This Place: Awakening to Our Common Home

To See This Place: Awakening to Our Common Home

September 05, 2025 to December 14, 2025

Ten years ago, Pope Francis published Laudato Si’: On Care for Our Common Home, a wake-up call addressing the global ecological crisis. Drawing on disciplines ranging from climate science to sociology, Francis proposed an “integral ecology” linking our treatment of the environment with our treatment of fellow human beings. Laudato Si’ and Francis’s 2023 follow-up document Laudate Deum are touchstones for individuals and institutions, including Jesuit schools such as Saint Louis University, responding to the challenges before us.

Laudato Si’ reminds us that artists play an indispensable role in our collective response to combating climate change and healing relationships with the planet and each other. To See This Place presents work by Athena LaTocha, Mary Mattingly and Tyler Rai, three artists whose work resonates with the major themes of Laudato Si’ and Laudate Deum.

Embodying a breadth of personal, geographic, and cultural backgrounds, the three artists create works strongly associated with a sense of place, whether specific or imaginary. Their works, spanning the disciplines of painting, photography, sculpture, video, and performative art, are informed by intensive research. The artists often incorporate materials sourced from particular locales, then draw forth broader themes from that particularity. In this way, the artists critique systems that perpetuate destructive self-interest, and draw attention to people who have been excluded or harmed by those systems.

These artistically compelling works can inspire us to creativity and boldness in our efforts to address climate change. By awakening us to the particularities and interconnectedness of the spaces we inhabit, these artists help transform climate despair into climate hope and move us from awareness to action.

Curated by Al Miner and MOCRA Director David Brinker, To See This Place presents work by Athena LaTocha, Mary Mattingly, and Tyler Rai. Spanning the disciplines of painting, photography, sculpture, video, and performative art, and informed by intensive research, the work of these three artists resonates with the major themes of Laudato Si’. By awakening us to the particularities and interconnectedness of the spaces we inhabit, these artists help transform climate despair into climate hope and move us from awareness to action.

To See This Place debuted at the Fairfield University Art Museum in January 2025. Learn more here.

About the Artists

Athena LaTocha

Athena LaTocha (b. 1969) is an artist whose works on paper explore the relationship between human-made and natural worlds. She incorporates materials such as ink, lead, soils and wood, looking at mark-marking and displacement of materials made by industrial equipment and natural events. Her works are informed by her upbringing in the wilderness of Alaska. LaTocha’s process is about being immersed in these environments, while responding to the storied and, at times, traumatic histories that are rooted in place.

Landscapes shaped by both natural and human forces inspire LaTocha, whose childhood in Alaska influenced her “perception of place and locating oneself.” There she was aware of the uniquely “massive perspective,” allowing her “to look down, to look across and to see great distances.” On a return trip, she went off the grid at a whaling camp on Kodiak Island, where her work took an abstract turn. Today, she creates by placing massive sheets of paper on the floor to obtain an aerial perspective as she works. As seen in the variety of scale presented here, LaTocha’s interests range from the microcellular to the cosmic.

LaTocha’s site-responsive, process-driven practice involves taking field notes, documentation, artifacts and raw materials from the landscape back to her studio. For some of the works on view here, LaTocha collected materials in New Hampshire. Decaying pine branches were burned to make charcoal. She extracted full sheets of prismatic mica from the depths of a private mine and crushed them in her hands. From a gravel-washing pond at a quarry, she took a large bucket of sediment to scatter. Her encrusted, corrosive surfaces heave rather than lay flat. LaTocha manifests the “human desire to maintain stability on something that’s always shifting.”

Additionally — and informed partially by her Indigenous heritage — Latocha comments on the politics of place. For instance, soil from Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery was used for small-scale works on view that carry memories of the city’s dead, but also of the Lenape people who first inhabited that land.

Mary Mattingly

Mary Mattingly (b. 1978) is an interdisciplinary artist whose work explores ecological relationships through sculptural ecosystems, performative installations, and research-based collaborations. Rooted in a deep inquiry into urban ecology and interdependence, her work addresses urgent issues around water, food systems and climate adaptation. At the core of Mattingly’s practice is a belief in art as a form of investigation and a tool for imagining adaptive futures. Her installations often function both symbolically and practically: creating space for gathering, co-learning, and reflecting on systems of resource extraction and ecological resilience.

According to Mattingly, the climate crisis isn’t an apocalypse, it is a “slow violence.” Through her work in social practice, collage, sculpture and photography, she seeks to inspire a perception shift in viewers and challenges them to take on the weight of responsibility.

Mattingly had a rural upbringing in New York, where the drinking water was contaminated with agricultural runoff. She says, “water was my first subject.” She studied science and geology in college and later became interested in publications ranging from Renewing the Earth to The Catholic Worker. These influences — along with dreams and recent experiences — inform the ongoing series Spring of an Ebb Tide (2023–present). In these works, weather phenomena and ancient water rituals collide with a recent interest in glacial spaces.

In 2022, Mattingly’s ground-floor New York City apartment flooded during an extreme rain event. She was then haunted by a recurring dream in which she “navigated the maze of a deconstructed apartment building that was dripping, leaking, and overgrown.” The still life on view here — rich with a watery blue background — evokes these occurrences. Other works incorporate her projects with water clocks. Dating to ancient Egypt, water clocks are clay vessels with a hole in the bottom. As it slowly drains out of the vessel, the water leaves marks on the vessel’s inner wall recording the passage of time. With the fate of our environment in mind, Mattingly poetically encourages viewers to imagine alternative futures.

Tyler Rai

Tyler Rai (b. 1991) is a transdisciplinary artist, ritualist, and producer who works across live performance, narrative essays, and experimental sound works. She draws connections between grief and mourning practices, biological and cultural inheritances, geologic time, and ecological change to reveal the poetic entanglements between spirituality, mythology, embodied experience and earth's ecological systems. She notes, “My body is an extension of the earth, and therefore the earth is always a research partner.”

Working across the worlds of performing and visual arts and ritual practice, Rai simultaneously mourns and celebrates the environment. She says, “Losing facets of the natural world calls our grief forward into practice.”

A rigorous researcher, Rai’s interest in time and the Jewish calendar brought her to an online course taught by Elana June during the pandemic. There, she learned about an Ashkenazi (Eastern European Jewish) spiritual tradition observed during Elul, the final month of the Hebrew calendar — when the boundary between the living and the dead is believed to grow thin. Women known as feldmesterin engage in a sacred practice of measuring entire cemeteries and the individual graves of their ancestors with cotton string, all while reciting tkhines — Yiddish prayers historically spoken by women. The thread, imbued with prayer, is later transformed into wicks for hand-dipped “soul candles” (neshome likht): some lit for the living, others kindled in remembrance of the dead on Yom Kippur. A video documents Rai’s own feldmestn, in which she offers neshome likht to a threatened stretch of shoreline along Maryland’s Chesapeake Bay—a gesture of mourning, reverence, and resistance in the face of climate change. As Rai says, “We need the earth in order to remember our rituals — and the time to remember is now."

Rai presents not only the video made as a result of the performance, but also a notebook. An extension of a practice enriched by collaborative community engagement, she encourages audiences to record here their own tkhines in it.

genius loci

Rai collaborated with SLU faculty member Holly Seitz Marchant and her choreography class on a new improvised work titled genius loci. We thank the Pulitzer Arts Foundation for making the Spring Church and Park-Like urban garden available for the performance.

Watch the video here.

About the Curators

Al Miner

Al Miner is an award-winning curator, educator and museum administrator based in Washington, D.C. Miner is deputy director for museum experience and digital eedia at the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. He previously served as founding director and chief curator of Georgetown University’s art galleries where he was also associate professor of graduate museum studies. Miner has also held curatorial roles at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the Smithsonian Institution’s Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden. He has authored three books and organized dozens of exhibitions, which have been reviewed widely in publications including The New York Times. Miner has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, The American Alliance of Museums and other organizations.

David Brinker

David Brinker is director of the Museum of Contemporary Religious Art (MOCRA) at Saint Louis University — the first museum to focus on the spiritual and religious dimensions in contemporary art. First volunteering at the museum as an undergraduate student, then joining the staff in 1995, Brinker has been deeply involved in every aspect of the museum’s operations and growth. He assumed the role of director in 2019. He has overseen important initiatives such as the MOCRA Voices podcast, and curated or co-curated numerous MOCRA exhibitions.


above:
Installation view, To See This Place: Awakening to Our Common Home, 2025. Photo: Kevin Lowder.


Related programming

Fall 2025 Exhibitions Preview

A Conversation with Athena LaTocha

Mary Mattingly: The Kristen Peterson Distinguished Lecture in Art and Art History


Watch Fall 2025 Exhibitions Overview

Watch A Conversation with Athena LaTocha

Watch Mary Mattingly: The Kristen Peterson Lecture

National Catholic Reporter article about To See This Place at Fairfield University Art Museum

Exhibition
Bernard Maisner: The Hourglass and the Spiral

Bernard Maisner: The Hourglass and the Spiral
February 3, 2017 to April 7, 2017

About the exhibition Bernard Maisner (b.1954) is regarded internationally as one of the greatest contemporary masters of calligraphy. Maisner first b...
Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre

Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre
January 26, 2016 to May 8, 2016

About the Artist Georges Rouault was born in working-class Paris in 1871, and apprenticed as a youth to a stained glass workshop. In late 1890, he en...
Erika Diettes: Sudarios

Erika Diettes: Sudarios
September 25, 2016 to December 11, 2016

About the Exhibition Colombian artist Erika Diettes draws upon her training as both an artist and an anthropologist by bringing forth work originating in the direct testimonies of the families of victims of decades of ongoing violence in her country, as well as in objects belonging to t...
Regina DeLuise: Vast Bhutan – Images from the Phenomenal World

Regina DeLuise: Vast Bhutan – Images from the Phenomenal World
January 24, 2015 to May 10, 2015

About the ExhibitionThe images in this exhibition, taken in Thimpu, Bhutan in 2010, center on the ordinary surroundings of a culture both remarkable and mysterious (Bhutan only opened its borders in the 1950s and still strongly restricts tourism). Bhutan’s history is intricately woven ...
Painting Prayers: The Calligraphic Art of Salma Arastu

Painting Prayers: The Calligraphic Art of Salma Arastu
September 13, 2015 to December 6, 2015

About the ExhibitionDrawing on her Hindu and Muslim background, and combining expertise in Arabic calligraphy with Abstract Expressionism and Color Field painting, Salma Arastu creates large, evocative canvases that invite viewers into quiet contemplation on texts from the Quran, the poe...
Thresholds: MOCRA at 20 – Part Two, The Second Decade

Thresholds: MOCRA at 20 – Part Two, The Second Decade
February 16, 2014 to August 1, 2014

About the Exhibition MOCRA celebrated a milestone anniversary with a two-part exhibition surveying works by artists displayed during MOCRA’s first twenty years. Part Two of Thresholds: MOCRA at 20 embraced the variety of artistic expressions exhibited throughout MOCRA’s his...
Rebecca Niederlander: Axis Mundi

Rebecca Niederlander: Axis Mundi
September 14, 2014 to December 14, 2014

About the ExhibitionMOCRA’s first site-specific installation, created by Los Angeles-based artist Rebecca Niederlander, utilizes multiple elements to create an abstracted environment of color, form, and contemplative space exploring the necessary connection among ourselves, others, and...
Jordan Eagles: BLOOD / SPIRIT

Jordan Eagles: BLOOD / SPIRIT
January 20, 2013 to June 28, 2013

About the ExhibitionFor over a decade, artist Jordan Eagles has garnered public and critical attention for his unique, signature use of animal blood in his works. Through an experimental, self-invented process, the artist combines blood with Plexiglas, UV resin, copper, gauze, and other ...
Thresholds: MOCRA at 20 – Part One, The First Decade

Thresholds: MOCRA at 20 – Part One, The First Decade
September 22, 2013 to December 15, 2013

About the Exhibition MOCRA celebrated a milestone anniversary with a two-part exhibition surveying works by artists displayed during MOCRA’s first twenty years. Part One of Thresholds: MOCRA at 20 embraced the variety of artistic expressions exhibited throughout MOCRA's his...
Archie Granot: The Papercut Haggadah

Archie Granot: The Papercut Haggadah
February 26, 2012 to May 20, 2012

About the ExhibitionHaggadah (הַגָּדָה) is Hebrew for “telling,” namely, the telling of the Exodus story at the Seder service during the Jewish festival of Pesach, or Passover. The term also signifies a book that contains the ritual guide to the Seder, along with scripture pa...
A Tribute to Frederick J. Brown

A Tribute to Frederick J. Brown
June 12, 2012 to August 26, 2012

About the Exhibition Frederick J. Brown (1945–2012) was one of America’s finest and most prolific expressionist artists. His paintings draw on...
Patrick Graham: Thirty Years – The Silence Becomes the Painting

Patrick Graham: Thirty Years – The Silence Becomes the Painting
September 23, 2012 to December 16, 2012

About the ExhibitionPatrick Graham has been credited by critics and art historians with changing the face of painting in Ireland. Art historian, writer and curator Peter Selz, who curated this exhibition, says that Graham “confronts the viewer with drawings and paintings of shattering ...
Adrian Kellard: The Learned Art of Compassion

Adrian Kellard: The Learned Art of Compassion
September 24, 2011 to December 18, 2011

About the Exhibition MOCRA presents a selection of work by Adrian Kellard (1959–1991). After art studies at SUNY Purchase he moved to New York City and studied under the artis...
Good Friday: The Suffering Christ in Contemporary Art

Good Friday: The Suffering Christ in Contemporary Art
February 2, 2010 to May 16, 2010

About the Exhibition MOCRA gives an encore presentation of one of its most popular exhibitions ever. Good Friday was originally presented in Spring 2009 as ...
James Rosen: The Artist and the Capable Observer

James Rosen: The Artist and the Capable Observer
September 26, 2010 to February 13, 2011

About the Exhibition Over his six-decade career, James Rosen has produced a body of visually arresting paintings, watercolors, and drawings, that gently invite viewers to stay a while. Rosen seeks "capable observers" who bring to bear their own intellect and imagination in order to obse...
MOCRA at Fifteen: Good Friday

MOCRA at Fifteen: Good Friday
February 15, 2009 to May 17, 2009

About the Exhibition On February 14, 1993, the world’s first interfaith museum of contemporary art opened its doors. Fifteen years later, Saint Louis University’s Museum of Contemporary Religious Art (MOCRA) continues to serve as a forum for the ongoing dialogue between today’s ar...
Michael Byron: Cosmic Tears

Michael Byron: Cosmic Tears
September 13, 2009 to December 13, 2009

About the Exhibition In the evocative paintings of the Cosmic Tears series, Michael Byron explores the relationship of the individual to the universal. The works are based on a text by the artist that meditates on the inevitable mix of emotions that accompanies the act of creat...
Miao Xiaochun: The Last Judgment in Cyberspace

Miao Xiaochun: The Last Judgment in Cyberspace
February 3, 2008 to May 18, 2008

About the Exhibition Chinese artist Miao Xiaochun asked himself an interesting question: “How would Michelangelo’s The Last Judgment appear from behind?” To explore this premise, Miao Xiaochun rendered a 3-D digital model of his own body. Then he mapped this model onto al...
MOCRA at Fifteen: Pursuit of the Spirit

MOCRA at Fifteen: Pursuit of the Spirit
September 21, 2008 to December 14, 2008

About the Exhibition On February 14, 1993, the world’s first interfaith museum of contemporary art opened its doors. Fifteen years later, Saint Louis University’s Museum of Contemporary Religious Art (MOCRA) continues to serve as a forum for the ongoing dialogue between today’s ar...
Oskar Fischinger: Movement and Spirit

Oskar Fischinger: Movement and Spirit
March 31, 2007 to July 11, 2007

About the Exhibition Oskar Fischinger (1900–1967) was a significant figure in the early days of filmmaking, attracting attention for his technolo...
The Celluloid Bible: Marketing Films Inspired by Scripture

The Celluloid Bible: Marketing Films Inspired by Scripture
September 16, 2007 to December 09, 2007

About the Exhibition A uniquely modern art form, film and its associated motion picture industry have taken Judeo-Christian scripture as subject matter from the very beginning of the medium and have continued that treatment to the present day. The Celluloid Bible: Marketing Films In...
Gorky: The Early Years – Drawings and Paintings, 1927–1937

Gorky: The Early Years – Drawings and Paintings, 1927–1937
January 22, 2006 to March 12, 2006

About the Exhibition Arshile Gorky (1904–1948) is widely regarded as one of the most pivotal and significant artists in the development of 20th-century...
Andy Warhol: Silver Clouds

Andy Warhol: Silver Clouds
November 9, 2001 to February 10, 2002

About the Exhibition MOCRA is pleased to bring Andy Warhol’s Silver Clouds to St. Louis for the first time, in one of the largest-ever installations of this charming 1966 work. Silver Clouds is a visual, auditory and tactile experience that appeals immediately to the...
Junko Chodos: The Breath of Consciousness

Junko Chodos: The Breath of Consciousness
March 18, 2005 to July 31, 2005

About the Exhibition The Breath of Consciousness is Japanese-American artist Junko Chodos’ first Midwest exhibition. It surveys the predominant themes and media in her oeuvre. The exhibition title references a recurrent image in her work, the lungs. In part originating in her...
DoDo Jin Ming: Land and Sea

DoDo Jin Ming: Land and Sea
September 16, 2005 to December 18, 2005

About the Exhibition “Respecting the awesome power and drama found only in the sea,” writes curator Catherine Evans, “DoDo Jin Ming creates violent black and white images that transport the viewer to a precipice about to be submerged under a cascade of water. Printing her pictures...
Rito, Espejo y Ojo / Ritual, Mirror and Eye: Photography by Luis González-Palma, María Magdalena Campos-Pons, and Pablo Soria

Rito, Espejo y Ojo / Ritual, Mirror and Eye: Photography by Luis González-Palma, María Magdalena Campos-Pons, and Pablo Soria
March 28, 2004 to June 13, 2004

About the Exhibition MOCRA is pleased to present the work of three significant Latin American artists to St. Louis audiences. While their personal and artistic backgrounds vary, all three artists share a common interest in creating multimedia works that extend the traditional bounds o...
Radiant Forms in Contemporary Sacred Architecture: Richard Meier and Steven Holl

Radiant Forms in Contemporary Sacred Architecture: Richard Meier and Steven Holl
September 10, 2004 to February 27, 2005

About the Exhibition Radiant Forms in Contemporary Sacred Architecture is MOCRA’s first exhibition dedicated to architecture. By means of photographs, drawings and plans, it brings together two of today’s most important architects in an examination of their approaches to de...
Daniel Ramirez: Twenty Contemplations on the Infant Jesus, an Homage to Oliver Messiaen

Daniel Ramirez: Twenty Contemplations on the Infant Jesus, an Homage to Oliver Messiaen
September 10, 2004 to February 27, 2005

About the Exhibition Concurrently with the exhibition Radiant Forms in Contemporary Sacred Architecture, MOCRA presents a series of etchings by Daniel P. Ramirez. First shown in 1981 at the Art Institute of Chicago, this set of 20 small abstract works are a response to a piano ...
Avoda: Objects of the Spirit – Ceremonial Art by Tobi Kahn

Avoda: Objects of the Spirit – Ceremonial Art by Tobi Kahn
September 2, 2003 to October 12, 2003

About the Exhibition Avoda is the Hebrew noun for “work,” as well as for “prayer/worship,” and the active mode implied by this title reflects Tobi Kahn’s interpretation of the rising interest and active participation in spiritual expressions. The Avoda exhibi...
Tony Hooker: The Greater Good – An Artist’s Contemporary View of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study

Tony Hooker: The Greater Good – An Artist’s Contemporary View of the Tuskegee Syphilis Study
February 23, 2002 to August 9, 2002

About the Exhibition The Tuskegee Experiment began in 1932 when the United States Public Health Service initiated a study of syphilis in African American males in Macon County, Alabama. With whatever intentions the study was begun, it evolved into a 40-year study of untreated syphilis i...
Andy Warhol: Silver Clouds, an encore presentation

Andy Warhol: Silver Clouds, an encore presentation
August 27, 2002 to December 14, 2002

About the Exhibition MOCRA is pleased to bring back Andy Warhol’s Silver Clouds (1966) in an encore presentation. Mercurial and buoyant, these pillow-shaped silver mylar balloons roam the air currents of MOCRA’s spacious nave gallery and respond to the touch of the viewer. ...
Andy Warhol’s Silver Clouds: A Fortieth Anniversary Celebration

Andy Warhol’s Silver Clouds: A Fortieth Anniversary Celebration
September 10, 2006 to December 17, 2006

About the Exhibition After introducing St. Louis audiences to Andy Warhol’s Silver Clouds in 2001 and reprising the exhibit in 2002, MOCRA is pleased to bring back the Silver Clouds on the occasion of the 40th anniversary of their 1966 debut at New York’s Leo Caste...
Lewis deSoto: Paranirvana

Lewis deSoto: Paranirvana
April 15, 2000 to November 05, 2000

About the Exhibition Lewis deSoto’s Paranirvana, a 25-foot long image of the reclining Buddha made of a nylon skin and inflated with air, based on a well-known Sri Lankan sculpture. Paranirvana was created especially for the 1999–2000 Bay Area Now 2 exhibition, the...
Robert Farber: A Retrospective, 1985–1995

Robert Farber: A Retrospective, 1985–1995
November 18, 2000 to April 01, 2001

About the Exhibition New York artist Robert Farber turned to art in his mid-30s and pursued it until his death in 1995 at the age of 47. His work has bee...
Bernard Maisner: Entrance to the Scriptorium

Bernard Maisner: Entrance to the Scriptorium
November 14, 1998 to June 28, 1999

About the Exhibition The late art historian George Kubler wrote in The Shape of Time, “[Works of art] are like gateways, where the visitor can enter the space of the painter, or the time of the poet, to experience whatever rich domain the artist has fashioned. But the visitor...
Tobi Kahn: Metamorphoses

Tobi Kahn: Metamorphoses
March 8, 1998 to May 8, 1998

About the Exhibition Curated by the distinguished art historian Peter Selz, Tobi Kahn: Metamorphoses brings together 37 paintings and 20 sculptures of an artist who extends an American tradition-the distillation of the natural world into elemental forms. Kahn’s antecedents in...
MOCRA: The First Five Years

MOCRA: The First Five Years
May 26, 1998 to October 25, 1998

About the Exhibition MOCRA celebrates its fifth anniversary with selections from its first fifteen exhibitions. Artists in the exhibition include: Dan Addington | Alvin Ailey | Seyed Alavi | Peter Ambrose | Frederick J. Brown | Heidy Sumei Chuang | Jon Cournoyer | ...
Steven Heilmer: Pietre Sante | Holy Stones

Steven Heilmer: Pietre Sante | Holy Stones
February 7, 1997 to March 16, 1997

About the Exhibition Expertly carved in Carrara and Vermont marble, the sculptures of Steven Heilmer juxtapose raw stone with highly finished sculpted fabric. In a dramatic partnering of surfaces, the “cloth” variously presents, wraps, confines, conceals and reveals roughly hewn mar...
Utopia Body Paint Collection and Australian Aboriginal Art from St. Louis Collections

Utopia Body Paint Collection and Australian Aboriginal Art from St. Louis Collections
April 4, 1997 to July 31, 1997

About the Exhibition A vigorous cultural revival is evident today throughout Aboriginal communities in Australia. Artists at Utopia—a tract of Aboriginal freehold land in the central desert of Australia—have produced some of the most vital, exuberant, and distinctive imagery of th...
Manfred Stumpf: Enter Jerusalem

Manfred Stumpf: Enter Jerusalem
September 26, 1997 to December 21, 1997

About the Exhibition Born in 1957, German artist Manfred Stumpf studied in Frankfurt, New York, and Vienna. He is a versatile artist whoo has worked in...
Frederick J. Brown: The Life of Christ Altarpiece

Frederick J. Brown: The Life of Christ Altarpiece
December 2, 1995 to April 19, 1996

About the Exhibition In 1992, prolific expressionist artist Frederick J. Brown offered to execute a large, multi-paneled altarpiece based on the life of Christ for the new Museum of Contemporary Religious Art. A generous gift of UMB Banks and the Crosby Kemper Foundations helped make th...
Edward Boccia: Eye of the Painter

Edward Boccia: Eye of the Painter
May 03, 1996 to June 30, 1996

About the Exhibition When appraising the long career of an artist, we tend to focus on the mature style, or the works best known by the public. Edward Boccia: Eye of the Painter seeks to render another view of the artist’s career, by presenting not only the large-scale allego...
Consecrations Revisited

Consecrations Revisited
December 1, 1996 to December 22, 1996

About the Exhibition Consecrations was the first group exhibition that put AIDS within a spiritual framework. Its 28 diverse artists, working in a range of media, expressed their experience with the disease in ways that reflected a profound empathy for anyone who has been touch...
Keith Haring: Altarpiece – The Life of Christ

Keith Haring: Altarpiece – The Life of Christ
April 8, 1995 to May 7, 1995

About the Exhibition Keith Haring’s work is known throughout the world for its unique and immediately recognizable pictorial language. His often light-hearted art reaches beyond the confines of museums. It can be found in subways, churches, schools, on T-shirts and watches, and even a...
Ian Friend: The Edge of Belief – Paintings, Sculpture, and Works on Paper, 1980–1994

Ian Friend: The Edge of Belief – Paintings, Sculpture, and Works on Paper, 1980–1994
May 19, 1995 to July 2, 1995

About the Exhibition MOCRA is honored to present the first American retrospective of Australian artist Ian Friend. Common concerns thread their way through the diverse works in the exhibition: a sense of awe for landscape; an appreciation for ritualistic and protective instruments (e.g....
Eleanor Dickinson: A Retrospective

Eleanor Dickinson: A Retrospective
August 26, 1995 to October 22, 1995

About the Exhibition Throughout Eleanor Dickinson’s work, the human form is seen as a reflection of the soul. Walter Hopps, former director of the Corcoran Gallery of Art, has called Dickinson “one of the country’s most powerful artists committed to figure drawing.” The current ...
Post-Minimalism and the Spiritual: Four Chicago Artists

Post-Minimalism and the Spiritual: Four Chicago Artists
May 3, 1994 to June 27, 1994

About the Exhibition The Minimalist movement, appearing in the mid-1960s and continuing well into the 1970s, is characterized by a reduction of forms to simple, basic geometric shapes, devoid of any ornamentation. Figuration was removed, and in some expressions of Minimalism, the artifa...
Consecrations: The Spiritual in Art in the Time of AIDS

Consecrations: The Spiritual in Art in the Time of AIDS
October 15, 1994 to February 19, 1995

About the Exhibition Consecrations is the first group exhibition that seeks to put AIDS within a spiritual framework. The 28 artists in Consecrations represent the religious, ethnic, cultural, sexual and geographical diversity of this country. Several of the artists ar...
Sanctuaries: Recovering the Holy in Contemporary Art, Part One

Sanctuaries: Recovering the Holy in Contemporary Art, Part One
February 14, 1993 to April 11, 1993

About the Exhibition MOCRA’s two-part inaugural exhibition features more than 100 works from an wide-ranging roster of artists working in styles ranging from traditional Western figuration to minimalist and geometric abstraction. The artists, generally in their 30s, 40s, and 50s, tend...
Body and Soul: The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater

Body and Soul: The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
October 24, 1993 to December 19, 1993

About the Exhibition Body and Soul celebrates 35 years of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and its exceptional contributions to contemporary cult...
Transformations: Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Transformations: Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
April 26, 2017 to April 8, 2018

About the Exhibition Transformation is an essential element of the creation and experience of art. Artists manipulate materials and perceptions in ways that bring their work, viewers, and themselves to new physical, psychological, and spiritual states of existence. Recognizing and talki...
Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre

Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre
March 8, 2011 to July 31, 2011

About the Artist Georges Rouault was born in working-class Paris in 1871, and apprenticed as a youth to a stained glass workshop. In late 1890, he en...
Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre

Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre
March 2, 2003 to May 11, 2003

About the Artist Georges Rouault was born in working-class Paris in 1871, and apprenticed as a youth to a stained glass workshop. In late 1890, he en...
Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre

Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre
January 18, 2000 to April 2, 2000

About the Artist Georges Rouault was born in working-class Paris in 1871, and apprenticed as a youth to a stained glass workshop. In late 1890, he en...
Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre

Georges Rouault: Miserere et Guerre
March 21, 1994 to April 26, 1994

About the Artist Georges Rouault was born in working-class Paris in 1871, and apprenticed as a youth to a stained glass workshop. In late 1890, he en...
Visible Conservation

Visible Conservation
September 22, 2017 to April 8, 2018

About the Exhibition In 2016 MOCRA acquired Michael Tracy's powerful 1981 work Cruz to Bishop Oscar Romero, Martyr of El Salvador. With Visible Conservation, we give visitors a rare behind-the-scenes glimpse of the process of documenting and cleaning the work prior to ...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
July 25, 2016 to September 3, 2016

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with lesser known gems. Featuring works by Romare Bearden, Dawoud Bey, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Doug DePice, Robert Farber, Luis González Palma, DoDo Jin Ming, Dean Kessman, Chris McC...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
May 30, 2015 to August 2, 2015

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with lesser known gems. Featuring works by Romare Bearden, Dawoud Bey, Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons, Junko Chodos, Doug DePice, Luis González Palma, DoDo Jin Ming, Dean Kessman, Frank LaPe...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection: The Romero Cross

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection: The Romero Cross
April 21, 2018 to July 28, 2018

About the Exhibition Seven months of conservation work culminate in the first public showing at MOCRA of Cruz to Bishop Oscar Romero, Martyr of El Salvador, a major mixed media sculpture by ...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
March 28, 2006 to July 30, 2006

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with lesser known gems. Featuring works by Seyed Alavi, Luis González Palma, Steven Heilmer, Anne Minich, Shahzia Sikander, Kazuaki Tanahashi, and other artists. above: Sr. ...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
June 20, 2004 to August 29, 2004

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with lesser known gems. Featuring works by Peter Ambrose, Gryphon Blackswan, Daniel Goldstein, Steven Luecking, Gary Passanise, Susan Schwalb, Michael Tracy, and other artists. a...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
November 4, 2003 to March 5, 2004

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with lesser known gems. Featuring works by Seyed Alavi, Nancy Fried, Donald Grant, Tobi Kahn, Virgil Myers, Shahzia Sikander, and other artists. above: Virgil Myers, Noah...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
January 7, 2003 to February 23, 2003

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with lesser known gems. Featuring works by Craig Antrim, Michael David, Sue Eisler, Adrian Kellard, Dean Kessmann, Anne Minich, Daniel Ramirez, and other artists. above: Jame...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
May 6, 2001 to November 8, 2001

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with lesser known gems and some works on loan. Featuring works by Peter Ambrose, Lori Bert, Sr. Helen David Brancato, Daniel Goldstein, Carolyn Jones, Stuart Klipper, Horatio Hung-Yan Law,...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
July 29, 1999 to December 22, 1999

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with lesser known gems. Featuring works by Michael David, Eleanor Dickinson, Steven Heilmer, Charlotte Lichtblau, J. W. Mahoney, Jeffrey Miller, and other artists. above: Mic...
Highlights from the MOCRA Collection

Highlights from the MOCRA Collection
January 15, 1998 to February 22, 1998

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with lesser known gems. Featuring works by Gryphon Blackswan, Heidy Sumei Chuang, Greg Edmondson, Jeffrey Miller, Carl Tandatnick, and other artists. above: Gryphon Blackswan...
Sanctuaries: Recovering the Holy in Contemporary Art, Part Two – Three Major Installations

Sanctuaries: Recovering the Holy in Contemporary Art, Part Two – Three Major Installations
April 18, 1993 to August 29, 1993

About the Exhibition MOCRA’s two-part inaugural exhibition features more than 100 works from an wide-ranging roster of artists working in styles ranging from traditional Western figuration to minimalist and geometric abstraction. The artists, generally in their 30s, 40s, and 50s, tend...
Beyond Words: Three Contemporary Artists and the Manuscript Tradition

Beyond Words: Three Contemporary Artists and the Manuscript Tradition
May 24, 2018 to November 12, 2018

About the Exhibition MOCRA, in collaboration with the Special Collections division of the Saint Louis University Libraries, presents an exhibition in the Lambert Gallery at St. Louis Lambert International Airport as part of the ...
MOCRA: 25

MOCRA: 25
September 16, 2018 to March 3, 2019

About the Exhibition The Museum of Contemporary Religious Art began with an audacious assertion: many of today’s visual artists engage with the religious and spiritual dimensions in their work—even if they sometimes go about it in ways quite different from prior generations. ...
Gary Logan: Elements

Gary Logan: Elements
March 19, 2019 to June 30, 2019

About the Exhibition Trinidadian-American artist Gary Logan explores humanity’s relationship with the Earth and its elements through dramatic lighting, atmospheric ambiguity, vivid colors, and rich textures. He finds visual and conceptual inspiration in two rich sources that utilize l...
Gratitude

Gratitude
September 15, 2019 to December 15, 2019

About the Exhibition Terrence Dempsey, S.J., Founding Director of MOCRA, retired from Saint Louis University on June 30, 2019, after nearly thirty years as a professor of Art History. With the exhibition Gratitude, he desires to express a deeply felt “thank you”—for the o...
Surface to Source

Surface to Source
February 5, 2020 to November 22, 2020

About the Exhibition For his first show curated as Director of MOCRA, David Brinker delves into the MOCRA collection, bringing out works that haven’t been shown in a number of years and juxtaposing them with perennial favorites. The works from the collection are joined by several work...
Quiet Isn’t Always Peace

Quiet Isn’t Always Peace
February 03, 2021 to May 20, 2021

About the Exhibition People everywhere were captivated as Amanda Gorman delivered her poem “The Hill We Climb” on the steps of the Capitol on Inauguration Day. Her cascading cadences of imagery alluded to orators of the past but unequivocally asserted her own voice in addressing th...
Tom Kiefer: Pertenencias / Belongings

Tom Kiefer: Pertenencias / Belongings
September 03, 2021 to December 19, 2021

About the Exhibition In July 2003, fine art photographer Tom Kiefer started working part-time as a janitor and groundskeeper at a U.S. Customs and Border Protection processing facility near Ajo, Arizona. In mid-2007, he was given permission to collect food confiscated from migrants and ...
Double Vision: Art from Jesuit University Collections

Double Vision: Art from Jesuit University Collections
February 16, 2022 to May 22, 2022

Three museums and seven centuries of art Double Vision: Art from Jesuit University Collections speaks to the unique role of art in Jesuit teaching as an instrument for finding meaning in life through imagination, feelings and reflection. The exhibition features 28 works from MO...
Lesley Dill: Dream World of the Forest

Lesley Dill: Dream World of the Forest
August 24, 2022 to October 16, 2022

About the Exhibition MOCRA is pleased to present three new collage-paintings by Lesley Dill, an American artist who works at the intersection of language and fine art in sculpture, printmaking, installation and performance, exploring the power of words to cloak and reveal the psyche. Di...
Jordan Eagles: VIRAL\VALUE

Jordan Eagles: VIRAL\VALUE
October 26, 2022 to December 18, 2022

Medium and Message Jordan Eagles is the master of a most unlikely medium: blood. His signature preservation technique permanently retains the organic material’s natural colors, patterns, and textures. In recent years, he has produced works made with donated human blood procured from...
This Road Is the Heart Opening: Selections from the MOCRA Collection

This Road Is the Heart Opening: Selections from the MOCRA Collection
August 24, 2022 to December 18, 2022

About the Exhibition The COVID-19 pandemic has illuminated harmful systemic inequities and our responsibility to name and respond to them. Simultaneously, we are recognizing the importance of attending to our own well-being in mind, body, and spirit, a holistic vision of human wellness ...
Vicente Telles and Brandon Maldonado: Cuentos Nuevomexicanos

Vicente Telles and Brandon Maldonado: Cuentos Nuevomexicanos
March 19, 2023 to June 25, 2023

Engaging a Living Tradition Artists Vicente Telles and Brandon Maldonado are forging new links in the chain of the continuing story of the people of New Mexico. Telles is firmly rooted in the Santero tradition (the making of santos, or images of saints), while Maldon...
Open Hands: Crafting the Spiritual

Open Hands: Crafting the Spiritual
January 28, 2024 to May 19, 2024

About the Exhibition Open Hands: Crafting the Spiritual assembles the work of six intergenerational artists from across the country who use everyday materials, found objects, and elements of craft production to explore issues related to faith and spirituality, personal and cu...
Selections from the MOCRA Collection

Selections from the MOCRA Collection
September 6, 2023 to December 17, 2023

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with recent acquisitions and lesser known gems. In particular, we pay tribute to the late ...
Continuum: Figuration and Abstraction in the MOCRA Collection

Continuum: Figuration and Abstraction in the MOCRA Collection
August 28, 2024 to December 15, 2024

About the Exhibition Art is a primary vehicle for conveying spiritual and religious experiences, from intense personal insights to the shared stories that help form a community. This exhibition highlights two general approaches employed by artists to express the religious and spiritua...
Continuum (Continued): Figuration and Abstraction in the MOCRA Collection

Continuum (Continued): Figuration and Abstraction in the MOCRA Collection
February 5, 2025 to May 18, 2025

About the Exhibition Art is a primary vehicle for conveying spiritual and religious experiences, from intense personal insights to the shared stories that help form a community. This exhibition highlights two general approaches employed by artists to express the religious and spiritual ...
Selections from the MOCRA Collection

Selections from the MOCRA Collection
January 28, 2023 to June 25, 2023

About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with recent acquisitions and lesser known gems. About the Exhibition Enjoy a look at some of the most popular works in the MOCRA collection, along with recent acqui...
To See This Place: Awakening to Our Common Home

To See This Place: Awakening to Our Common Home
September 05, 2025 to December 14, 2025

Ten years ago, Pope Francis published Laudato Si’: On Care for Our Common Home, a wake-up call...
Legacy: Selections from the Gerald R. and Mary Reid Brunstrom Gift of Art from Australia

Legacy: Selections from the Gerald R. and Mary Reid Brunstrom Gift of Art from Australia
September 05, 2025 to December 14, 2025

From 1988 to 2000, St. Louis art lovers frequented Austral Gallery in the Lafayette Square neighborhood. Guided by the vision of founder Mary Reid Brunstrom with the unwavering support of her late husband Jerry, Austral Gallery brought some of the most significant Australian voices in contemporar...
Liminal

Liminal
March 01, 2026 to May 31, 2026

In a liminal phase, we transition from one status to another, a condition of uncertainty and possibility. What was familiar passes away; what is to come has not yet arrived. We may reflect on the past and envision the future. MOCRA enters into a liminal phase...