Catalina Island Museum is reopening its outdoor Artists’ Plaza and Schreiner Family Plaza and new sales gallery to the public, including the popular Elizabeth Turk: Tipping Point exhibition, Wednesdays through Sundays from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The museum invites members and visitors back to enjoy the open-air plazas at half-price admission of $8.50 available for purchase online at catalinamuseum.org.
Catalina Island Museum’s spacious open-air plazas and garden areas overlook distinctive views of Catalina’s canyons and clear waters and offer guests over 8,000 square feet of outdoor space to explore at their own pace and from a safe physical distance. The outdoor plazas, museum store, and sales gallery are operating at 25 percent capacity with increased measures and guidelines in place including enhanced sanitizing and cleaning protocols, hand sanitizing stations at all entrances and restrooms and the requirement to wear a mask.
On the roof of the museum in the Artists’ Plaza and Schreiner Family Plaza, guests can experience the museum’s ongoing Tipping Point sculpture exhibition by acclaimed sculpture artist and MacArthur “Genius Grant” Fellowship Awardee Elizabeth Turk exploring the concept of extinction. Inspired by a changing natural world and with many of California’s Channel Island birds on the cusp of extinction, Turk titled her work Tipping Point to highlight the danger to us all but also to show that there is hope.
Visitors can also view and purchase original prints from the Soot and Water: Gyotaku Records of Catalina exhibition featuring a collection of 17 gyotaku prints by artist Dwight Hwang in the museum’s sales gallery. Hwang’s traditional form of printmaking offers an opportunity to see beneath the waves into Catalina Island’s undersea world and showcases 23 species from the waters surrounding Catalina Island.
While the museum’s indoor exhibitions remain closed to the public, the museum’s spacious retail store is open. Guests can view exemplary products telling the story of the island’s awe-inspiring and wondrous history including Catalina pottery pieces, a small exhibition sharing the story of Bruce Belland’s “26 Miles” song, and a grouping of plein air paintings depicting the various buildings and spaces that existed before its 2016 facility was erected. The friendly and knowledgeable museum staff can help visitors to the island plan their days and activities including information about historical landmarks and points of interest throughout Avalon and a wealth of knowledge about the history of the island from its indigenous roots to the present.
A virtual tour of the museum’s Titanic: Real Artifacts, Real People, Real Stories is also available for viewing in the museum store. The new Gayle Garner Roski: Journey to the Titanic exhibition displaying 26 watercolors documenting her visit to the remains of the RMS Titanic can be viewed from a distance in the museum store through a wall of glass.