Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum
Home to the more than 10,000 pieces of nonconformist art from the former Soviet Union and an excellent summer camp for children ages 7 to 15, the museum includes works by Mary Cassatt, James McNeill Whistler, and Toulouse-Lautrec. Located at Hamilton and George streets, New Brunswick. Call 732/932-7237 or visit
www.zimmerlimuseum.rutgers.edu.
Art in Camden & Newark
Camden’s Stedman Art Gallery is administered by a volunteer committee, which organizes its events. To volunteer, call 856/225-6606. For more information about the gallery, call 856/225-6350 or visit
http://www.ruarts.org/.
Newark’s Robeson Gallery at the Paul Robeson Campus Center exhibits works by both students and faculty. Visit www.andromeda.rutgers.edu/artgallery or call 973/353-1610 for more information.
Geology Museum
On the College Avenue campus in New Brunswick stands historic Geology Hall, and inside is one of Rutgers’ largely unknown treasures, a museum of fossils, rocks and minerals, meteorites, mummies, mastodons, and trackways of dinosaur footprints from Towaco, New Jersey. Minerals can be purchased at the museum’s shop. For more information, call 732/932-7243 or visit
http://geology.rutgers.edu/museum.shtml.
Visual Arts Galleries at Civic Square
Five galleries in the new art school building on Livingston Avenue in downtown New Brunswick showcase the work of prominent artists and exhibitions of works by graduate and undergraduate students at Mason Gross School of the Arts. Admission is free to alumni. For more information, call the gallery coordinator at 732/932-2222, ext. 798 or visit
www.masongross.rutgers.edu/visarts/arts_gallery.html.