North Wing

Harbors and Horizons: Maritime Prints by Phil Dyke

Throughout his career, Phil Dyke (1906-1990), one of Southern California’s most accomplished and respected artists, was repeatedly drawn to coastal and maritime subjects. Harbors, docks, sailboats and open water provided an ideal framework for his artistic interests, allowing him to balance strong structure with expansive space.

North Wing

Jørgen Klubien: at Disney and Pixar

Born and raised in Denmark, Jørgen Klubien emerged in the international animation world during one of the most important creative eras in the history of Walt Disney Animation Studios and Pixar Animation Studios. His drawings, storyboards, and character explorations helped form the invisible architecture beneath many of the films that defined a generation.

Sodaro South Wing

Cabinets of Wonder: The Art of Ralph Allen Massey

Enter the witty, wildly imaginative world of Los Angeles painter Ralph Allen Massey, who has been devoted to exploring the quirks, memories and visual poetry of American pop culture. Each work functions as a miniature “cabinet of wonder,” inviting visitors to linger, decode hidden jokes and references, and rediscover cultural icons that shaped generations.

North Wing

Witness to a Vanishing West: Maynard Dixon and The Oregon Trail

In 1927, near the end of a remarkable career, Maynard Dixon undertook what would become his last major illustration commission: a cycle of drawings for a new edition of Francis Parkman’s classic 1849 travel narrative, The Oregon Trail. The resulting works — nine of which are on view in this exhibition — stand among Dixon’s most evocative and mature achievements.

Sodaro South Wing

Route 66 – Happy 100th Birthday to America’s Mother Road: Paintings by Joan Gladstone

Celebrate the centennial of America’s most iconic highway as artist Joan Gladstone captures the spirit and nostalgia of historic Route 66 – the “Mother Road” that stretches 2,400 miles, from Chicago to Santa Monica. This exhibition showcases 18 vivid contemporary oil paintings of the legendary road and its bold, colorful signage.

North Wing

Stone and Scene

The premise of this exhibition, displaying viewing stones with California Scene paintings from The Hilbert Collection, is inspired by the Japanese practice of presenting viewing stones with scrolls in a tokonoma, an alcove in a traditional Japanese home used for displaying flower arrangements, bonsai or stones alongside a scroll.

Sodaro South Wing

Emigdio Vasquez: Retrospective 50

The art of Emigdio Vasquez (1939-2014) returns to the Hilbert Museum in what marks the largest and most comprehensive collection of his works ever exhibited. The exhibition features more than 50 oil paintings—many never before shown in public—drawn from the collections of Vasquez’s family and other devoted collectors, and traces his artistic evolution.

North Wing

Spirits of Earth and Fire: Pueblo Pottery from the Hilbert Collection

This exhibition highlights the artistry of top Indigenous potters from the pueblos of the Southwest, including exquisite tiles by the legendary Nampeyo and elegant vessels by Sara Fine Tafoya, Monica Silva, and others. Formed from the land and fired with care, these ceramics embody centuries-old traditions passed down through generations of Pueblo artists.

North Wing, Burra Family Community Room

Rock On, California! California’s Rock Poster Revolution

This exhibition, curated by Chapman University students, honors the artistic stylings of California’s rock music event posters. In the mid-1960s, a new kind of graphic art burst onto the streets of California. Created to promote live music but driven by artistic experimentation, rock posters became one of the most distinctive visual expressions of the burgeoning counterculture.

North Wing

Art of the Airwaves: Portable Radios

Step back into the golden age of broadcast with this vibrant showcase of sleek, stylish and sometimes surprising portable radio designs from the 1940s through the 1960s. Featuring compact masterpieces that span the transition from tubes to transistors, this exhibition celebrates the ingenuity of American designers during the height of radio’s popularity.

North Wing

California Art from The Permanent Collection

Eight galleries in the North Building are dedicated to showcasing the vast variety of oil and watercolor paintings, prints and drawings in The Hilbert Collection, from the late 1800s through the Depression-era rise of the California regionalist Scene Painting style to the works of contemporary Golden State artists working today.