Monday |
10 am – 5 pm |
Tuesday |
10 am – 5 pm |
Wednesday |
10 am – 5 pm |
Thursday |
10 am – 9 pm |
Friday |
10 am – 5 pm |
Saturday |
10 am – 5 pm |
Sunday |
10 am – 5 pm |
Closed Mondays October 15 – May 15






Carmen Keitsch was born in the small town of Navolato, Sinaloa, Mexico, where she discovered her passion for the arts and classical music early in life. Thus, inspired her to study theater, pottery, music and painting. Carmen moved to Canada in 1989 where she began to explore Pre-Hispanic folk art combining symbolism, poetry and color. History and culture of the native Aztec and Maya people of North America are strongly reflected in her art. Her paintings also display a profound spiritual meaning of her life journey and those around her.
David Zamora Casas
the United States. She states that these works reflect what she calls her “brown intellectual property”—the experiences, knowledge, and feelings gathered over more than four decades of study of Latino, Chicana/o, and American Indigenous culture and communities. She has produced hundreds of works in the “Make ‘Em All Mexican” series (2010-2021), painting various vintage and Victorian antiques brown, as well as The Brown Dot Project, a series of data pictographs where brown dots signify US Latino data and statistics.
Delilah Montoya
installation, and public art. The book Celia Álvarez Muñoz by writer/poet Roberto Tejada surveys her career. Muñoz’s work has been nationally and internationally exhibited, including at the Whitney Museum of American Art 1991 Biennial; her latest cataloged exhibition is Radical Women: Latin American Art 1960-1985, which toured in the US and Brazil (2017 – 2018).
Judith F. Baca
Alfred J. Quiroz tackles injustices with a sense of humour and an edge of satire. Deeply researched, the events he highlights in his works are often forgotten traumas or racial stereotypes offered up with glossy garish paint. Now a Professor Emeritus at the University of Arizona, Quiroz has enjoyed a long history as an art educator, joining the University in 1989 as an Assistant Professor and retiring in 2008. In 2006 he was commissioned by the National Museum of Mexican Art in Chicago to create a piece for the travelling exhibition African Presence in Mexico, and he has also designed theatre sets and community murals nationally and internationally.
To kick things off in April, MOA invites families to join us at the Museum to learn about Ramadan traditions and celebrations.
Like the first spark of a new flame, Ky is a spoken word poet that thrives on air from the audience and the winds of the moment. Her free flowing lyrical style weaves personal identity and social activism, with the energy of whatever room she finds herself in. As a human raised around the world, she is an artist that works with the crowd to pull them in for ride of new ideas and perspectives.
Turunesh
range touch upon the realities of life from relationships with the self to the ones you love. Born in the UK, she spent her childhood moving to Ghana, Bangladesh, and Vietnam. Maia has been surrounded by sounds of all backgrounds, which influence her desire to mix genres and create unique sounds.