Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery

Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College is open to the public.

The Tang invites curiosity and collaborative learning through active engagement with ideas, artworks, and exhibitions. Programming tailored to foster formative connections between contemporary art and students of all ages is central. Critical to this end are direct experiential opportunities for Skidmore students to participate in integral aspects of museum practice. The Tang Museum collects works

of art, which by their preservation and display, provide opportunity for further study. A vigorous publication program serves as a learning tool and will join regular traveling exhibitions as important means of outreach. The Tang’s designation as a teaching museum signals Skidmore’s intent to make Tang exhibitions and museum use by students and faculty a significant aspect of the interdisciplinary undergraduate liberal arts education it offers. The museum’s mission focuses on ideas; regular use of museum galleries and collection storage as teaching spaces, and the principle that artworks can and should be used to advance knowledge across the disciplines. At the heart of the Tang Museum is an ambitious exhibition program of approximately twelve exhibitions each year. The Tang originates nearly all of its exhibitions and regularly involves faculty and students as curators and advisors for its signature interdisciplinary exhibitions. These large-scale projects combine diverse objects such as antique maps, scientific equipment, Rube Goldberg cartoons, Hudson River School landscapes, and Shaker furniture with new works of international contemporary art. Tang exhibitions probe the boundaries of conventional curatorial practice, frequently crossing time-periods and disciplines, and encompassing all types of media and objects to explore intersections between the visual and performing arts, natural sciences, and humanities in new and inventive ways. The Tang also originates significant survey exhibitions of contemporary art, featuring major emerging and established artists. The Opener Series features artists who come to campus as part of their collaboration and often involve realizing new work. As part of its mission, the Tang regularly produces catalogues to extend its projects beyond the gallery, and to provide valuable resources for future study. Catalogues include new writings by artists and scholars, and source interviews with many artists. The Tang’s programming includes artist dialogues, symposia, workshops, and lectures as a direct articulation of Skidmore’s founding vision in which each area of study is connected to a range of other disciplines. The Tang’s website also supports the teaching mission of the museum and is regularly updated to provide background information on current exhibitions, new programs, and events open to the general public and the Skidmore campus. The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College opened in October 2000. Designed by architect Antoine Predock, the 39,000-square-foot building is sited dramatically on Skidmore’s scenic Saratoga Springs, New York campus.

The Wall Street Journal reviews ‘Kathy Butterly: Assume Yes’ at the Tang, calling the exhibition “joyful proof that dimi...
06/12/2026

The Wall Street Journal reviews ‘Kathy Butterly: Assume Yes’ at the Tang, calling the exhibition “joyful proof that diminutive sculpture can be intimate, funny and even moving.”⁠

The article looks closely at Butterly’s abstract sculptures, noting how their scale invites close looking that reveals their humor, invention, and psychology. Plagens writes that, by bringing the works together in a single gallery, “the curator makes everything feel as alive as a flower garden.”⁠

Read the full article at the link in our bio 🔥

06/11/2026

Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College is participating in Blue Star Museums, a program that provides free admission to active-duty U.S. military personnel and their families during the summer. 🇺🇸

The 2026 program continues now through Labor Day, Monday, Sept. 7, 2026

👉Learn more here https://tang.skidmore.edu/
Find the list of participating museums at arts.gov/BlueStarMuseums

“Joyful proof that diminutive sculpture can be intimate, funny and even moving.”We’re delighted to share that Kathy Butt...
06/11/2026

“Joyful proof that diminutive sculpture can be intimate, funny and even moving.”

We’re delighted to share that Kathy Butterly: Assume Yes has been reviewed in The Wall Street Journal by Peter Plagens.

In “Small Work, Big Ideas,” Plagens writes about Butterly’s inches-tall ceramic sculptures, their wit and psychological depth, and the ways the exhibition brings together form, color, scale, and feeling.

Curated by Dayton Director Ian Berry, Kathy Butterly: Assume Yes features 45 works created over the past 30 years and is on view at the Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College through July 26.

Plan you visit today!

Read the review: https://www.wsj.com/opinion/free-expression/kathy-butterly-assume-yes-review-diminutive-not-diminished-sculpture-fedce211?reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink

The artist’s ceramic works, highly attuned to form and most just a few inches tall, are the focus of a show at the Tang Teaching Museum.

Remembering Duane Michals (1932-2026). Forever an inspiration. 🤍
06/10/2026

Remembering Duane Michals (1932-2026).
Forever an inspiration. 🤍

In ‘When & Where We Rest,’ artist Sheila Pepe transforms the Tang mezzanine into a space for gathering, reflection, and ...
06/04/2026

In ‘When & Where We Rest,’ artist Sheila Pepe transforms the Tang mezzanine into a space for gathering, reflection, and pause. Drawing on decades of work informed by le***an, q***r, and feminist aesthetics, material culture, and social history, invites visitors to consider the multiplicity of rest—how we access it and how we experience it. What does rest mean to you?

Photos of ‘Sheila Pepe: When & Where We Rest’: visitors resting, a poetry reading by Jacob Shores-Argüello, + an installation view
📸 1 & 2 by , 3 by .mindy

We’re celebrating recent press coverage for three student-curated Tang exhibitions that reflect the depth of student res...
06/04/2026

We’re celebrating recent press coverage for three student-curated Tang exhibitions that reflect the depth of student research, creativity, and curatorial engagement at Skidmore.

**Designing Power: The Black Panther Party**
Curated by Connor Rustin ’27, the 2025–26 Carole Marchand Endowed Intern at the Tang, the exhibition explores how graphic design, symbolism, and compelling visual language served as critical tools of ideology and political movement.
Read the review in Musée Magazine: https://museemagazine.com/culture/2026/4/15/designing-power-the-black-panther-party-tang-at-skidmore

**Inked: Stigma, Otherness, and Art**
Curated by Lauren Attwell, the 2024–25 Carole Marchand Endowed Intern at the Tang, this online exhibition considers the history and continuity of tattoos as marks of otherness, expressions of individualism, and emblems of community.
Read the feature in 518ish: https://518ish.substack.com/p/trending-tuesday-skin-deep

**Pursuing Possibilities: Explorations in Glaze**
Curated by Emily Lin ’26, the 2025–26 Charina Endowment Fund Endowed Intern at the Tang, the exhibition examines the relationship between scientific experimentation and artistic exploration in ceramics, showing how the chemistry of glazes can help drive an artist’s vision.
Read the ArtDaily feature: https://artdaily.com/news/196599/Tang-exhibition-explores-ceramic-glaze-as-art--chemistry--and-chance

Congratulations to Connor, Lauren, and Emily, and to everyone who supports student learning, research, and curatorial practice at the Tang.

We’re thrilled to hear that working at the Tang was ’s favorite job ever! 💛 Suleika greeted visitors in our galleries in...
06/01/2026

We’re thrilled to hear that working at the Tang was ’s favorite job ever! 💛 Suleika greeted visitors in our galleries in 2005. Swipe to see some of our current Tang Guides showing off the summer 2026 edition of !

Read the full interview, “Suleika Jaouad: From Saratoga, With Love,” by , at the link in our bio

Opening reception for the 2026  Alumni Reunion Art Exhibition tonight, 5/29, at 5 pm 💛 For the 32nd annual exhibition, g...
05/29/2026

Opening reception for the 2026 Alumni Reunion Art Exhibition tonight, 5/29, at 5 pm 💛

For the 32nd annual exhibition, guest curators Leslie Ferst ’76, Martel Haynes-Catalano ’11, Rachel Seligman ’91, and Charlie Smith ’06 present a selection of art by celebrating reunion classes ending in a 1 or a 6.

Swipe to see Harun Zankel ’01 working on ‘Impermanence,’ his site-specific mural created for the exhibition!

📸 Emily Lin ’26 used X-ray fluorescence (XRF) to analyze the chemical makeup of glazes on many of the artworks in ‘Pursu...
05/27/2026

📸 Emily Lin ’26 used X-ray fluorescence (XRF) to analyze the chemical makeup of glazes on many of the artworks in ‘Pursuing Possibilities: Explorations in Glaze,’ opening 5/30.

The exhibition, which she curated, draws from the and looks at how glazes affect the color, texture, and surface of ceramic works. Featuring a range of glazing effects, surface textures, and firing techniques, ‘Pursuing Possibilities’ explores how artists use glaze recipes to plan for certain results while also leaving room for surprise after firing.

The exhibition is Emily’s capstone project as the 2025-26 Charina Endowment Fund Intern, a yearlong internship at the Tang that gives students hands-on experience with the collection and exhibition-making. Emily graduated from Skidmore this May, bringing together her studies in Art History, Studio Art, and Chemistry.

Photos 2-5:
〰 Mike Helke, ‘Lidded Jar, Multi-color Striped,’ 2009
〰 Regis Brodie, ‘Untitled,’ 1973
〰 Jennie Jieun Lee, ‘Rubber Hand,’ 2015

Address

815 N Broadway
Saratoga Springs, NY
12866

Opening Hours

Tuesday 12pm - 5pm
Wednesday 12pm - 5pm
Thursday 12pm - 9pm
Friday 12pm - 5pm
Saturday 12pm - 5pm
Sunday 12pm - 5pm

Telephone

+15185808080

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Establishment

Send a message to Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery:

Share

Category