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Gallery Tour in American Sign Language

Thurs, Jun 13 | 6:00–6:45

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  • Free with museum admission

    No registration required

Color photograph of a light-skinned woman using American Sign Language in front of Grant Wood's painting "American Gothic."

Looking for a good place to start your museum visit? Join a knowledgeable guide for a 45-minute ASL tour of museum icons and lesser-known treasures. During this participatory experience, you’ll connect with works from across the collection and share thoughts and ideas with fellow visitors. All are welcome—whether this is your first time in an art museum or your one hundred and first.

Tours are delivered entirely in ASL. While all are welcome, ASL Interpretation for hearing visitors will not be provided.

This tour starts at the Grand Staircase, on the first level near the glass doors. Please be sure to arrive on time as tours begin promptly.

Gallery tours take place every day the museum is open. See all upcoming gallery tours. Please note that in-person tours may be canceled or postponed due to unforeseen circumstances.

If you have any questions about programming, please reach out to museum-programs@artic.edu. For questions related to accessibility accommodations, please email access@artic.edu. 


Learn More about Gallery Tours

What artworks do we talk about?
Most tours will visit 3-5 artworks to provide ample time for discussion. Educators decide which artworks to include based on their current research and the artwork’s potential to inspire curiosity and conversation. Your tour guide will highlight artworks by sharing stories and context and by encouraging the group to look closely and find fresh interpretations, even of objects we may have seen many times. 

While tours cover a wide range of galleries across the museum, those tours beginning by the tours sign at the Woman’s Board Grand Staircase are most likely to visit galleries devoted to Arts of Europe: Painting and Sculpture, Arts of Europe and Arms and Armor, Arts of China, Japan, and Korea, Arts of Africa, Arts of the Americas 4000 BCE-Present, and Photography and Media. 

Tours beginning in Griffin Court are most likely to visit galleries devoted to Modern and Contemporary Art, Architecture and Design, Arts of the Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Worlds, Arts of the Americas 1650–1950, Arts of Ancient Egypt, and Textiles.

What happens on a participatory tour?
In addition to sharing thought-provoking stories and information about works of art, the educator will make space for participants to share ideas throughout the conversation as a means of tapping into the collective wisdom of our community. Educators will ask questions and prompt a variety of voluntary interactive responses to foster a rich discussion informed by research, observation, and lived experience.

Who leads gallery tours?
Gallery tours are led by members of the Art Institute staff as well as artists, external partners, and educators who are deeply knowledgeable about art, the Art Institute collection, and creative practice. They are dynamic presenters trained to connect people with art in ways that are fun, accessible, thought-provoking, and relevant to our everyday lives. Educators love discussing art and design their own tours so that each experience is unique and enriched by the interests of the educator and our visitors.

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