EventsMember Preview: The Lost World: The Art of Minnie Evans

Member Preview: The Lost World: The Art of Minnie Evans

November 13, 2025 | 12–5 p.m.
Location: High Museum of Art
Registration Required

Minnie Evans (American, 1892–1987) Designs, Wrightsville Beach, 1968, collage with oil, crayon, and pencil on canvas, Gibbes Museum of Art, Museum purchase with funds provided by the National Endowment for the Arts Living Artist Fund, 1979.019.

Exclusive benefit for museum members

Free

Register

Not a member? Join today!

Experience The Lost World: The Art of Minnie Evans, featuring the work of acclaimed American artist Minnie Evans. Members see it first and free! On Thursday, November 13, discover this new exhibition before it opens to the public.

Minnie Evans (1892–1987) once described her drawings, filled with human, botanical, and animal forms, as coming from “the lost world,” referring to “the nations destroyed before the Flood.” After her grandmother died in 1934 and the visions she had been experiencing since childhood became stronger, Evans went on to produce a large and celebrated body of work and, in 1975, became one of the first Black artists to have a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art. Though she was lauded in her lifetime, she has not been the subject of a major exhibition since the 1990s.

Inspired by its growing collection of her work, the High has organized this nationally touring retrospective that brings together more than one hundred of Evans’s fantastical drawings and puts them in the larger context of her extraordinary life. Presented chronologically beginning with Evans’s spare, line-driven compositions of the 1930s through to her colorful, complex compositions and lush, utopian mandalas of the 1960s, the exhibition, and its catalogue, explore how Evans fits into expanded canons of Surrealism, how she was shaped by major historical events, and how the way she spent her days—first as a domestic worker and later as gatekeeper at North Carolina’s Airlie Gardens—impacted her art as much as her extrasensory experiences. After The Lost World debuts in Atlanta, Evans’s work will make a triumphant return to the Whitney in summer 2026.

Preregistration is required. Please enter the exhibition at your designated time to prevent overcrowding in the galleries.