
Look Homeward, Angel: Letterio Calapai’s Wood Engravings of the Asheville-Inspired Novel
Folio of wood engravings by Letterio Calapai interpreting Thomas Wolfe's 1929 Asheville-set novel, presenting intricate black-and-white prints that evoke the book's landscapes and characters; exhibition runs through Feb. 22, 2026.
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Black and white wood engravings by Letterio Calapai render scenes from Thomas Wolfe’s semi-autobiographical novel set in fictionalized Asheville, using dense linework and dramatic contrasts presented as a folio.

Black and white wood engravings by Letterio Calapai render scenes from Thomas Wolfe’s semi-autobiographical novel set in fictionalized Asheville, using dense linework and dramatic contrasts presented as a folio.
Black and white wood engravings by Letterio Calapai render scenes from Thomas Wolfe’s semi-autobiographical novel set in fictionalized Asheville, using dense linework and dramatic contrasts presented as a folio.

Letterio Calapai's intricately carved wood engravings evoke animals and fantastic beasts drawn from a medieval bestiary and Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel, presenting literary and regional narratives in a focused museum gallery show.

Letterio Calapai's intricately carved wood engravings evoke animals and fantastic beasts drawn from a medieval bestiary and Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel, presenting literary and regional narratives in a focused museum gallery show.
Letterio Calapai's intricately carved wood engravings evoke animals and fantastic beasts drawn from a medieval bestiary and Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel, presenting literary and regional narratives in a focused museum gallery show.

Material-focused mixed-media works by women artists from the Pacific Northwest, spanning textile, sculpture, and painting in a museum gallery setting; on view at Asheville Art Museum through May 17, 2026, gallery hours Wed–Sun.

Material-focused mixed-media works by women artists from the Pacific Northwest, spanning textile, sculpture, and painting in a museum gallery setting; on view at Asheville Art Museum through May 17, 2026, gallery hours Wed–Sun.
Material-focused mixed-media works by women artists from the Pacific Northwest, spanning textile, sculpture, and painting in a museum gallery setting; on view at Asheville Art Museum through May 17, 2026, gallery hours Wed–Sun.

An expansive survey of studio ceramics marking a 45 year regional ceramics legacy, with hand-built and wheel-thrown vessels, functional pottery, and kiln-fired sculpture on view through April 26, 2026.

An expansive survey of studio ceramics marking a 45 year regional ceramics legacy, with hand-built and wheel-thrown vessels, functional pottery, and kiln-fired sculpture on view through April 26, 2026.
An expansive survey of studio ceramics marking a 45 year regional ceramics legacy, with hand-built and wheel-thrown vessels, functional pottery, and kiln-fired sculpture on view through April 26, 2026.