Designated a national Historic Landmark in 1976, the Dawes House was built in 1894-5 on a two-acre lakeshore site. Designed in the style of French chateaux by Henry Edwards-Ficken of New York, the...
This gallery displays dolls, moccasins, blanket strips and a variety of carrying bags with the distinctive beadwork designs typical of the Crow, Cheyenne, Blackfoot and Lakota (Sioux). Also on display...
The unofficial spokesperson for the group of abstract painters known as the New York School, Robert Motherwell had a long career as a painter, printmaker, writer and critic during a fertile period in...
The exhibits in this gallery provide insight into the people living along the Pacific Coast of Washington, Alaska and British Columbia and in the northern reaches of Canada. Prints, baskets, masks and...
Items on display in this gallery illustrate the culture and art of the Pueblo, Navajo and southern Arizona Papago and Tohono O'odham (Pima) peoples. Cases are devoted to Pueblo pottery and the silver...
This display focuses on the native peoples living east of the Mississippi River. Included is a full-size birchbark canoe, clothing and crafts of the Southeastern Woodlands peoples, a rare, late 19th...
The Center's renovated gallery space features an exhibit focusing on architect and urban planner, Daniel Burnham (1846-1912), who made Evanston his home for nearly all of his professional life. The...