Special Exhibits

Special Exhibits

 

OPENING SOON: For the Love of Color and Light

Artwork by Pia Sjölin and Anders Knutsson

Main Gallery
Exhibit Opening with the Artists: Friday, July 11, 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. (Free admission)
Open through Sunday, Sept. 14
 
This exhibit features paintings by two contemporary Swedish artists who have immigrated to the United States. Scandinavians have developed a particular culture to express their feelings about light (and its absence) through old and new manifestations and rituals. In this exhibit, Sjölin and Knutsson combine this culture with influence from contemporary American works of art. Learn more about Anders Knutsson and Pia Sjölin.
 
 

Be More Pippi

Created by the Astrid Lindgren Company

Raoul Wallenberg Gallery
Open through Sunday, Aug. 3
 
For the last 80 years, the world’s strongest girl, Pippi Longstocking, has made us both laugh and think. She exemplifies what it means to be brave, free, and kind. This exhibit will honor Pippi’s legacy in honor of this landmark anniversary of Astrid Lindgren’s beloved Swedish character. 
 
 

COMING IN AUGUST: Swedes at the Fair

Curated by the Swedish American Museum

Raoul Wallenberg Gallery
Friday, Aug. 8 - Sunday, Nov. 2
 
Swedes at the Fair will highlight the Swedish American experience in Chicago at the 1893 World’s Columbian Exposition, and ways in which Swedish cultural heritage was put on display through exhibits in the Swedish Pavilion, programming on “Sweden’s Day”, and more. Visitors will be provided with interesting insights into the Swedish immigrant community’s multifaceted entry into mainstream American life through this significant historical event.
 

Andersonville Through the Ages

         

Sponsored by the Lind Family and Created in Collaboration with the DePaul History 391 Class of Spring 2020

In The Lind Room on the Museum's second floor, the Andersonville Through the Ages exhibit showcases how Andersonville became and remained an area rich in Swedish heritage. It illustrates how Andersonville has evolved over the years to incorporate contemporary tastes and hold new community celebrations, all the while holding onto its Swedish character.     

Traveling Exhibit: Available for Loan

An Ocean Apart: Swedish Immigrant Letters

By the Swedish American Museum

Sponsored by the Swedish Council of America

More than one million Swedes left their homeland between 1850 and 1930. Though they left their home country behind for opportunities abroad, many continued to keep close ties to their family and friends back in Sweden. Often these ties took the form of personal letters written to and from Sweden between parents, children, friends, brothers, sisters, cousins, aunts and uncles all separated by an ocean, but still able to share their lives with one another. Few historical texts are as interesting and compelling as personal letters. They offer an insight into the lives of early 20th century Swedish immigrants and reveal how they shared many of the same kinds of hopes, interests and even humor that we have today. The letters also give us a look into the past from personal and individual points of view. 

These personal accounts detail the lives of those on both sides of immigration including those who left and those who remained in Sweden. Many of the letters in collection of the Swedish American Museum were written to the immigrants here in the U.S. from friends and family back in Sweden. The letters are a peek into the lives of their writers and receivers from how the crops were doing that year to news about marriages, births and—of course—who else was beginning to feel the pull of “America Fever.” This exhibition contains a selection of stories pulled from the hundreds of letters in the collection of the Swedish American Museum. Discover the world of Swedish immigrants to the United States Midwest, as told by those who lived it.

Exhibition Materials:
•    5 retractable banners 
•    34” (W) x 7’ (L)

 

If you are interested, please contact Sarah Hawkinson, Curator, at shawkinson@samac.org

 

Please note that at times we use exhibit spaces for events during Museum hours and viewing can be limited.


All of our exhibits are wheelchair accessible.

Sponsors of our Temporary Exhibits: