Arts and Entertainment
December 20, 2023
From: Museum Of Contemporary ArtMOCA will be closed December 24, 2023 - January 3, 2024.
We look forward to welcoming you back in the new year!
SAVE THE DATE: GALA 2024
Join us on April 20, 2024 for our Gala!
Pre-sale tickets available now through December 31!
GET YOUR TICKETS TODAY
PROGRAMS & EVENTS
Free Third Thursday
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 21 | 5-9PM
Join us for a free evening at MOCA with galleries open late, music by KXCI Community Radio DJs, drinks, and food by Doshirok! Don’t miss this lively time to gather with friends and family around art and music; all ages are welcome!
Stay Gold Showcase
JANUARY 9-30 | JOEL D. VALDEZ MAIN LIBRARY
Photo collages made by participants in the Fall 2023 Stay Gold program led by artist Mariel Miranda will be on view at the Joel D. Valdez Main Library this January!
The Joel D. Valdez Library is located at 101 N. Stone Ave.
Minor Mutiny Mural Unveiling
SUNDAY, JANUARY 21 | 2-3PM
Celebrate the unveiling of a new mural designed and painted by the participants in MOCA’s Minor Mutiny Teen Leadership Program in the courtyard of The Tucson Jewish Museum & Holocaust Center.
The Tucson Jewish Museum & Holocaust Center is located at 564 S. Stone Ave.
EAST WING EXHIBITIONS EXTENDED
Raven Chacon: While hissing
ON VIEW THROUGH JANUARY 21, 2024
While hissing is an exhibition by artist, performer, and Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Raven Chacon that celebrates sound as a medium for resistance and connection. Through video installation, graphic scores, and performance, Chacon amplifies Indigenous women’s voices, centering their leadership and vision both as carriers of memory and authors of culture.
Na Mira: Subrosa
ON VIEW THROUGH JANUARY 21, 2024
Subrosa is the first solo museum exhibition by Na Mira, an artist who uses intuitive and experimental processes to create immersive moving image installations. MOCA has commissioned a new chapter of Mira’s project imagining White Dust From Mongolia, an unfinished film by the late artist and author Theresa Hak Kyung Cha. In Subrosa, nonlinear films, radio transmissions, and the color red bleed together to touch the edges of memory.