2026 Member Rates Announced

Lars Hasselblad Torres • February 20, 2026

JOIN OUR CREATIVE COMMUNITY.

Membership at AVA Gallery and Art Center is a wonderful way to support the visual arts in the Upper Valley. When you join AVA, you become part of a vibrant community of artists and patrons who, over the years, have built a cherished space to learn, produce, and exhibit visual art. Your membership helps AVA keep the lights on, present the work of artists who live and work throughout the region, and creates access to our facilities. All AVA Gallery members receive reciprocal membership in the North American Reciprocal Museum association, which provides access to hundreds of cultural institutions across the United States and Puerto Rico, Canada, Mexico, Bermuda, and the Cayman Islands, .


As a member you:

  • Help to sustain the careers of artists through our exhibitions and workshops
  • Support inclusive and accessible arts programs for all ages and abilities
  • Are welcome to visit and use our open spaces during business hours
  • Help shape to the organization through our annual meeting and special events


And you are eligible to:

  • Show your work in our Bank Street Gallery and member exhibitions
  • Lease one of our 19 artist studios on the second and third floor
  • Use our metal, wood, and ceramics studios for personal projects
  • Volunteer and receive a 50 percent discount on any membership level

MEMBERSHIP THAT WORKS FOR YOU.


  1. MAKER & MENTORS. $75/MO. OR $900/YR.
    Metal, wood, ceramics or something else. Secure access to our beautiful Bente Torjusen West Sculptural Studies Building to make and share the things you love. A safety and skills test is a prerequisite of use. Enjoy all the benefits of full membership including the eligibility to present work in our Bank Street Gallery and join our artist studio wait list, discounts on classes and space rental, and a presence on our website.
  2. ARTIST & PATRONS. $20/MO. OR $240/YR.
    Artist and Patron members help to build our culture of excitement and support for the arts. Artists and patrons are encouraged to visit AVA during open hours, enjoy use of our galleries, open spaces, and our coworking library and lounge. We invite your ideas for special programming and private events. Artist and Patron members enjoy all the benefits of full membership including the eligibility to present work in our Bank Street Gallery, join our artist studio wait list, discounts on classes and space rental, and a presence on our website.
  3. FRIENDS & FAMILY. $10/MO. OR $120/YR.
    Being a Friends and Family member of AVA is a great way to keep your toe in the waters of creativity while supporting our mission. Friends and Family are encouraged to visit our galleries during open hours and receive a discount on classes, invitations to our public events along with early access to private event ticketing. Friends/Family and are eligible to reserve our private spaces and join our artist studio waitlist.


WANT TO HELP? BE AN AVA VOLUNTEER.
Members who are volunteers shape our community and visitor experience by contributing a few hours every month in a variety of roles. You can join as touch-up crew, event support, greeters and tour guides, Bank Street Gallery associates, and studio monitors. Volunteers make a deep contribution to our culture and enjoy all the benefits of any membership level at a 50 percent discount. To be eligible for the full volunteer benefit, members must complete AVA volunteer orientation and a month of service.


NEED A LITTLE HELP? WE’VE GOT YOU.

AVA Gallery is committed to inclusion, and to fulfill this mission we ask those who can to give more, and those who can’t to pay what you can. So, need some flexibility? Just reach out and we’ll help make it work.


CARE TO ROUND UP? WE LOVE YOUR SUPPORT.

Your membership fees aren’t tax deductible but a gift is. Use the “Give A Little” option when you sign up for or renew your membership. Whether it's $5 or $500, no gift is too small; all gifts help ensure that AVA Gallery and Art Center remains open and accessible for all. And, thank you from the future!



THE EXTRA BENNIES.

All AVA members enjoy a 10 percent discount on custom framing and art supplies at Duke’s in Lebanon and Bean’s in Hanover; on custom framing at the Junction Frame Shop in White River Junction, VT; at Red Roof Frame Shop in West Lebanon; and on closed-toe, all leather boots/shoes at Huberts Family Outfitters. Plus a 10 percent discount on all AVA products and services including merchandise, classes, events, and space rental fees. Discount does not apply to the purchase of artwork.

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late sun on grain fields
By Claire Geno July 1, 2026
Young and emerging artists from AVA Gallery create a new exhibition together to be shown at the Enfield Shaker Museum in Enfield, NH. AVA is located in Lebanon, NH, near Hanover and Dartmouth College.
Jackie Brown Installing Sculpture
By Peili Heitzman April 30, 2026
Jackie Brown After a long trek from Maine and the exciting frenzy of her exhibition install, exhibiting artist Jackie Brown sat down with us in AVA’s Rebecca Lawrence Gallery to share her journey as a ceramicist. Brown’s experimentation with form, material, and process has been an evolving practice through which she has reflected and investigated her world in flux. Changes in seasons, the environment, growth, decay, petrification, come to life in her sculptures. As much as they tell a story about our natural world, her work reflects the artist’s innovation with 3D modeling, molds, and AI technology that have become fundamental tools in her work. At the intersection of nature and technology, Brown’s work is intricate and otherworldly. Her exhibit “Fault Lines and Foundations” will be on view at AVA until May 23rd, she will also be hosting an artist talk on May 23rd from 3-4. You won’t want to miss it! Peili Heitzman: When did you first start making art? Jackie Brown: I was always interested in making art, you know, as a kid and growing up, but it was in college. I first started taking art classes, sculpture classes, ceramic classes, and making art in a more serious way and thinking about the possibility of pursuing a life as an artist and what that might look like, and if that might be possible. PH : Can you tell us about your journey to clay? JB: I went to Hamilton College for undergrad and they had an amazing ceramics program. So that was where I sort of first became fascinated by ceramics and all the different ways that it can be used and explored and I really loved the way it was challenging. I knew I would never be bored working with clay and ceramics. There was always more to learn about – the chemistry, the processes, the different states of the clay, the different temperatures and kinds of clay and firing processes. I love the challenge of it, and I love how broad and vast it is. PH : Can you talk about your process of creating sculpture with clay? And then can you talk about your process and the 3D printing element? JB: I would say clay, it's the material I keep coming back to as an artist. Because it is so malleable and it's a shape shifter and it has this limitless potential to change and transform. And so, I really love that about it, and then that informs how I approach the process. I work a lot with molds, clay will mimic anything, so I make a lot of plaster and silicone molds where I can produce multiples. But then, because clay is wet and malleable, I can combine parts while the clay is still wet, and I can work with lots of molds and then replicate the same parts over and over again but then combine them in endless variations. So, I love having these constants and these variables. 3D printing became another way to create parts. When you make a mold, you can replicate the same part repeatedly, and when you 3D print you can as well replicate parts, but because of the process- 3D printing extrudes clay- so it's different every time; clay has a mind of its own. I love that potential to replicate these parts and play and then combine them in different ways. Because of the malleability of the clay, I can squish parts together, I can push from the inside out, I can combine parts while they're wet, I can fuse parts together in the kiln. There's all this different potential for transformation. PH : Your work revolves around exploring geological change in living systems. Is there a specific place you've been to or lived in that inspired this curiosity and exploration of nature? JB: I don't know if there's a specific place but spending a lot of time outside. And there's something about New England. I grew up in New England; there's something about the seasons here. There's something about being in one place, year after year, and watching those small, subtle changes of growth in transformation, occur and recur. PH: Much of your process intersects human creation with technology. How has the collaboration with technology in AI transformed or changed your process? JB: For me, it just feels like more possibilities. I think of AI as a tool, the same way I think of a band-saw as a tool or a car as a tool. I'm interested in how those tools can allow for different possibilities. Multiple tools augment and expand the possibilities within an experimental process. PH: Can you recall a piece of advice you received from a teacher or mentor that has stuck with you today? JB: There are so many! One is to just get out of your own way. For me, if I plan too much or get to set on how something's going to come out, I tighten up, and I become a perfectionist. And so, I created strategies in my process that allow me to experiment and discover form rather than preconceive the form. That's a way of getting out of my own way. PH: As a teacher yourself, what advice would you give to a young artist, emerging in the art world today? JB: To engage in process and to build a relationship with your work, because that's what will sustain you. If you have genuine creative practice that you're nurturing, you'll be able to weather any storms that come at you. And to resist that urge to feel like you must constantly be churning out and sharing new things on social media or out in the world. Give things the time they need to take shape
By Travis Paige March 24, 2026
Please enjoy this video clip provided by WCAX-TV, featuring Lebanon High School art students and AVA’s Curatorial Assistant, Peili Heitzman. The18th annual exhibition of regional high school artwork features more than 100 works by emerging artists from 14 regional schools across the Upper Valley. The exhibition runs through March 28, 2026. Each year, AVA invites art faculty from Vermont and New Hampshire high schools to nominate students who demonstrate exceptional promise in their creative work. The exhibition brings together and puts the spotlight on young artists working across multiple disciplines including ceramics, drawing, mixed media, painting, photography, sculpture, and wearable art. These young artists are pushing boundaries, experimenting with materials, and making art that challenges and inspires us. We’re excited to celebrate their achievements and show our community what the next generation is capable of. Participating schools include Cardigan Mountain School, Hanover High School, Hartford High School, Kimball Union Academy, Lebanon High School, Mascoma Valley Regional High School, New England School of the Arts, Proctor Academy, Rivendell Academy, The Sharon Academy, Stevens High School, Thetford Academy, Windsor High School, and Woodstock Union High School.