
Each month, our community gallery features new exhibitions of original works created by local and regional artists in our Gallery @ Room 1927, located at 6 South Joachim Street (next door to the Saenger Theatre). The gallery is open Tuesday through Friday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Any artists are eligible and may submit a proposal for consideration. Exhibitions are usually displayed from the first Wednesday through the last day of each month.
In addition to our traditional gallery, we are now also accepting proposals for quarterly exhibitions in our window display cases, located between Room 1927 and the Saenger Box Office. If you are interested in creating a window installation, email director@mobilearts.org.
Join us on the second Friday of each month during LoDa ArtWalk for our exhibition receptions. Meet the artists, see their work in person, and create a personal connection with what is on display. Our gallery is open to the public Tuesdays - Fridays from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Saturdays from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. View our current and recent exhibitors below!
Our Community Gallery program is made possible thanks to the Daniel Foundation of Alabama and the J.L. Bedsole Foundation. To sponsor an exhibition, please see our Sponsorship Information.
2025 EXHIBITION SCHEDULE

Exhibition schedule is subject to change.*
CURRENT EXHIBITIONS
The National Photography Month open call group show instructed artists to “tell us your story,” and showcases the depth and diversity of photographic storytelling. The exhibit invites viewers into the personal and creative narratives of photographers from across the region. Each piece offers a unique perspective and visual voice, showcasing the many ways photography is used to reflect memory, identity, and place. Photography, the art of capturing light to create imagery, is a medium rich in history and emotion used to document, communicate, and express the human experience. From film to digital, portraiture to landscapes, photography continues to shape how we see the world and share our stories. In today’s era of camera phones and instant sharing, this exhibit offers a moment to reflect on photography’s roots and evolution.
Participating artists include Gwen Ainsworth, Jennifer Clifton, Hailey Clifton, James Currie, Walter Dedrick, Richard Dollison, Daniel Domenzain, Vernon Fowlkes, Jessica Jones, Rodney Kilgore, Mike Kittrell, Kandon Kyser, Vincent Lawson, Savannah Mercer, Micah Mermilliod, Cheryl Nicholls, Matt O’brien, Debi Parnell, Michelle Pujols, Lyza Rodriguez, Laurie Schaerer, Nikki Shaw, Katie Thompson.
Navigating the Broken Road exemplifies the power of photography as both a healing process and a storytelling force.
Karen Bullock is a photographic artist living in Alabama. She is known for her documentary-style images of the American South, with a focus on expressions of faith, considerations of home, and the enduring spirit of nature. Primarily lens-based, her practice uses vivid color and light to explore the unheard voice via gesture, sense of place, and mood.
Her photographs have been featured in over 30 exhibitions & various publications including: The Ogden Museum of Southern Art, USM Museum of Art, Alabama Contemporary Art Center (during the Pinky MM Bass exhibition), Float Magazine, Lenscratch, National Geographic Spain, F-Stop Magazine, and in several exhibitions at the Mobile Arts Council. Karen’s is represented by Sophiella Gallery in Mobile, Alabama. Her work is also available at Photographic Gallery-SMA (San Miguel Allende, Mexico).
In addition to photography, Karen enjoys curatorial work and collaborating to create group installations that foster community. She has curated collections from The Do Good Fund, and installed exhibitions on dance, discrimination, and art made with plant-based dyes. These exhibitions have included workshops led by quiltmakers from Gee’s Bend, artist Douglas Baulos, author Watt Key, and others from the local community. Prior to the sale of the property, she volunteered as the curator for art at The Lost Garden downtown on Dauphin Street. Navigating the Broken Road is a deeply personal photographic journey that documents a cross-country road trip covering over 11,000 miles across the United States. Diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 2021, Bullock embarked on the journey in 2023 with her husband, capturing the beauty and complexity of the American landscape while navigating her evolving experience of life with MS. Her documentary-style photography explores themes of resilience, home, faith, and nature—inviting viewers to witness both a literal and emotional passage through adversity and awe.
These exhibitions will be on display in MAC’s Gallery @ Room 1927 through May 2025. The gallery is open Tuesday-Friday, 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and on Saturday, 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Please contact Sydney Cramer at scramer@mobilearts.org for more information.
The H2O Exhibit by Faye Earnest and Tom Telhiard is an abstraction of aerial views of water: Above the Water, Ocean Layers, and Seventy-One Percent. As the exploration continued, the view became closer and closer to the Earth.
Faye Earnest enjoys bold color with exotic textures. From her first landscapes to her examinations of geological formations, her aerial views have continued to evolve. Her work is collected nationally and internationally. Painting for over 30 years, she creates innovative views of our planet. With three degrees in art, University of Alabama, University of South Alabama, and University of Southern Mississippi, her work has been exhibited in New York, Germany, Greece, St. Thomas, Las Vegas, Miami, Santa Fe, Taos, Dallas, Asheville, Chicago, and New Orleans.
Tom Telhiard, BFA, MFA is a graduate of the University of South Alabama with a bachelor’s in fine art and went on to complete a master’s in fine art with Honors at Cranbrook Academy of Art, located in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan where his work remains today in the Cranbrook Museum permanent collection. Upon completing his degree at Cranbrook he served as full time faculty at Bishop State Community College, adjunct faculty at Faulkner University, Montgomery Alabama. During his faculty tenure at Bishop State, he completed cultural exchanges, through the department of education Fulbright program, studying art in Belgium and the Netherlands. He then entered a faculty exchange position for one year in Newcastle, England. Upon his return from England, he completed a public art commission for the Mobile Chamber of Commerce, the Dunes. Other significant Kinetic commissioned pieces were a mobile at the Riverview Plaza, the Aeolus at the Mobile Regional Airport, the Cantilever at the original Exploreum Museum, and the Wind Waltz, remains on the Alabama Sculpture Trail in Langan Park for the Mobile Museum of Art. He also had solo exhibitions of his paintings where a piece remains in the permanent collection at the Montgomery Museum of Art. He completed numerous other pieces in public and private collections along the Gulf Coast. Tom’s work is an exploration of the interplay between water, light and color, particularly through the lens of abstract seascapes. Using oil paint and glazes, he creates layers that evoke depth and luminosity, allowing the color to mirror the fluidity of the sea and sky. This series is inspired by growing up on the Gulf Coast and Tom’s world travels. His goal is to inspire reflection and to encourage a deeper understanding of the world we inhabit.
The Shibui Chapter of the Sumi-e Society of America presents The Essence of Ink. Dedicated to the tradition of Asian brush painting, the society, founded in 1985, fosters the study and practice of Sumi-e, a centuries-old technique that emphasizes simplicity, fluidity, and expressive brushwork. Meeting twice a month in Mobile, AL, members explore the delicate balance of ink and water to capture nature’s essence in its most distilled form.
These exhibitions will be on display in MAC’s Gallery @ Room 1927 through April 2025. The gallery is open Tuesday-Friday, 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. and on Saturday, 11:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Please contact Sydney Cramer at scramer@mobilearts.org for more information.
PAST EXHIBITIONS
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