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Photograph: Courtesy of Carl Hammer Gallery | Eugene Von Bruenchenhein, "Untitled" (detail), 1954.

Intuit Art Museum

  • Museums | Art and design
  • River West/West Town
  • price 1 of 4
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Time Out says

Intuit is the only nonprofit organization in the U.S. devoted to the exclusive presentation of outsider and contemporary self-taught art. More than simply a gallery, Intuit is a vital resource for students, scholars and the art enthusiasts, featuring a permanent collection containing 1,100+ works of art, the Henry Darger Room collection, the Robert A. Roth Study Center, educational programs and more.

Details

Address
756 N Milwaukee Ave
Chicago
Cross street:
at Ogden and Chicago Aves
Transport:
El stop: Blue to Chicago. Bus: 56, 66.
Price:
$5, kids under 12 free.
Opening hours:
Tue, Wed 11am–6pm; Thu 11am–7:30pm; Fri, Sat 11am–6pm
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What’s on

Catalyst: Im/migration and Self-Taught Art in Chicago

The newly renovated Intuit Art Museum is the perfect place to visit the exhibition, “Catalyst: Im/migration and Self-Taught Art in Chicago.” This exhibition is part of a citywide initiative highlighting Chicago's artistic heritage and creative communities. “Catalyst” focuses on the impact of immigration and migrant experiences within the self-taught artist community. The featured works investigate the inciting incidents for artists' displacement and subsequent settling in Chicago, offering a unique perspective on artistic practice as a personal narrative.
  • Exhibitions

Impressions of a City: Drawings by Marvin Young

Experience Chicago through the eyes of artist Marvin Young at Intuit Art Museum’s latest exhibition. Since joining the Arts of Life studio in 2024, the lifelong South Sider has used vibrant mixed media to capture both imagined and remembered urban scenes. From large-scale portraits to detailed architectural landscapes, Young’s work brings the city to life with vintage walk-ups, classic cars and the energy of the streets. 

Cutting and Pasting a World: The Paper Craft of Henry Darger

Intuit Art Museum joins the national Handwork 2026 celebration with an exhibition investigating Henry Darger’s relationship to traditional American paper crafts. Drawing on research by art historian Dr. Mary Trent, the exhibition demonstrates how Darger adapted common practices—such as making paper dolls and scrapbooks—into a complex, mixed-media narrative style. By showcasing Darger’s source materials alongside his final works, the exhibition highlights how he reclaimed these institutionalized hobbies to express the interior lives and struggles of the marginalized.
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