The Understanding Race Theme Semester features a rich array of exhibits in addition to the signature Race and IndiVisible exhibits and the local exhibits at the Museum of Natural History.
Click on the links below to find out more. Come back again as we will continue to add information as it becomes available!
- Proclaiming Emancipation (through February 18)
- Making Their Own Way: African Americans in the Culinary World (January 7-April 12)
- Places for the Spirit — Traditional African American Gardens (January 18–March 10)
- Claiming Citizenship: African Americans and New Deal Photography (January 17–February 22)
- State of Exception: An Exhibition of the Undocumented Migration Project - Richard Barnes, Jason De Léon, Amanda Krugliak (January 24–March 12)
- To me there's no other choice: Raoul Wallenberg 1912-2012 (January 31–March 1)
- El Otro Lado / The Other Side (February 22–May 24)
- Building Islam in Detroit: Foundations, Forms, Futures (March 5–April 4)
- 18th Annual Exhibition of Art by Michigan Prisoners (March 19–April 2)
- Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States (March 13–August 1)
- Infinite Mirror-Images of American Identity (November 5–December 6)
Exhibits
- Race: Are We So Different?
- IndiVisible: African-Native American Lives in the Americas
- Exhibits at the Museum of Natural History
- Exhibits Across Campus
- Proclaiming Emancipation
- Making Their Own Way: African Americans in the Culinary World
- Places for the Spirit – Traditional African American Gardens
- Claiming Citizenship: African Americans and New Deal Photography
- State of Exception: Richard Barnes, Jason De Léon, Amanda Krugliak
- To me there is no other way - Raoul Wallenberg 1912-2012
- El Otro Lado - The Other Side
- Building Islam in Detroit: Foundations, Forms, Futures
- 18th Annual Exhibition of Art by Michigan Prisoners
- Interrupted Life: Incarcerated Mothers in the United States
- Infinite Mirror-Images of American Identity



