Let the hunt begin, the Easter Egg hunt that is! After two years of backyard searching we are all ready to run in large fields (and maybe even dive in a pool) to see where the Easter Bunny has hidden his bright colored treasures. The options this year are plentiful from farms to historic manors to zoos all offering their own twist on the nostalgic plastic Easter Egg hunt. So grab your basket and your running shoes, we are off to find some chocolate filled fun!

Green Meadows Petting Farm Egg Hunt

easter activities and events
iStock

This “One Price Does It All” destination offers a big bang for your buck as the general admission of $16/ person includes more than just an Easter Egg hunt. Green Meadows boasts over 200 animals to pet and feed (FREE food provided for feeding), hayrides, rubber duck races, large play area and new this year, an Easter Trail where you can meet their Easter Bunny, Whiskers. Children can participate in one Egg Hunt per day (they will be running continuously from 10:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m.) and need to bring their own basket (one can be purchased onsite for $5). 

Cost: $16/ per person
When: April 1-2, 9-10, 14-17
Where: 10102 Fingerboard Rd. Ijamsville, MD 
Online: tinybeans.com 

Underwater Egg Hunt

iStock

Dive in to Easter fun at the Reston Community Center. Children 6 months to 9 years can scoop up Easter eggs floating on the pool's surface while strong swimmers can show off their swimming skills by diving down to grab the eggs on the bottom of the pool. A parent/adult is required to accompany each non-swimmer. A limited number of life jackets are available (ones brought from home must be U.S. Coast Guard approved).

Cost: $4/Reston resident, $8/Non-Reston resident
When: April 9th 12:30-4:00 p.m.
Where: Terry L. Smith Aquatics Center, 2310 Colts Neck Rd., Reston, VA
Online: tinybeans.com 

 

 

Bunnyland at Butler’s Orchard

iStock

Ten acres of farm fun goes all out for Easter! Admission to Bunnyland includes time to jump on the orchard’s jumping pad, a hayride through the decorated Day Trail, a hunt for colorful eggs, giant slides, pedal tractors, farm animal encounters, a visit with the Country Bunny and a goodie basket to take home. For an additional fee guests can participate in face painting and pony rides. Breakfast, lunch and treats are sold at Farmer’s Porch Kitchen from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. 

Editor's note: Easter eggs are NOT filled and must be returned, but children under 12 will leave with a goody bag. 

Cost: $10/person online & $12/person at the gate
When: April 9, 10, 14, 15, 16, 18, 23 & 24
Where: 22200 Davis Mill Rd., Germantown, MD
Online: tinybeans.com 

Easter Egg Hunt at Lee-Fendall House Museum & Garden

iStock

Spend an afternoon hunting for Easter Eggs in Alexandria's Lee-Fendall garden. Sessions include a visit from the Easter Bunny, crafts and games. Tickets are required for the event as space is limited. Participants are encouraged to wear masks and must provide their own baskets.

Cost: $15/children 2-12; $5/adults; free/under 2
When: April 16 & 17
Where: 614 Oronoco St., Alexandria, VA
Online: tinybeans.com 

Leesburg Animal Park's Easter Egg Hunt

Leesburg Animal Park

Spend an afternoon with an African-Crested Porcupine, White-Handed Gibbons, two adorable sloths and other exotic animals while you gather up Easter Eggs at this Loudoun-based petting zoo. Egg hunts at the Animal Park are broken up into 3 age groups for kids up to 12. L.A.P provides an egg hunt bag and eggs are filled with small toys. The number of eggs each child can collect will be monitored so everyone gets a fair share. Note that the egg hunts happen rain or shine with no refunds or reschedules. If you choose not to attend on your purchased day, your ticket is valid for another weekday or non-event weekend admission. 

Cost: $16.95/adults, $19.95/children
When: April 9, 10, 16 & 17 2022
Where: Leesburg Animal Park, 19246 James Monroe Hwy Leesburg, VA
Online: tinybeans.com 

Roer’s Zoofari Egg-Citing Eggstravaganza

Tara G. via Yelp

Face painting, Bunny photos, an Easter Parade with the animals, arts and crafts and more will fill your day at Roer’s Zoofari! Running for 2 weekends in April, you’ll find a full schedule of events for the entire family (there is even an adult Easter Egg hunt twice daily). On Sundays check out the paint session with Mrs. Cheryl. 

Cost: $30/adult and $20/child (members are $5/ person)
When: April 9, 10, 16, 17 
Where: 1228 Hunter Mill Rd. Vienna, VA
Online: tinybeans.com 

Seasons at Magnolia Manor Easter Eggstravaganza 

Seasons at Magnolia Manor

Seasons at Magnolia has been customizing their Egg Hunts to meet community needs for the past 3 years. In 2020 they took their eggs on the road and delivered to 57 families in Carroll and Frederick Counties. In 2021 they hosted socially distanced, small group hunts on property. For the 4th annual Eggstravaganza, families can gather at Magnolia Manor to return to the open field style egg hunt. There is even a dedicated field for those that are more comfortable staying masked and hunting within a smaller group. Bring the kids out to meet the Easter Bunny, trade eggs for prizes and snap some photos at the amazing property. 


Cost: Free!
When: April 9
Where: 111 S. Springdale Ave. New Windsor, MD
Online: tinybeans.com 

Easter Monday at the National Zoo 

iStock

Continue your Easter celebration into Easter Monday with the National Zoo’s Washington Family Tradition. Throughout the day on Monday, April 18th, the Smithsonian’s National Zoo will offer an egg hunt with prizes, special animal demonstrations and live entertainment. Check the calendar of events for tortoise, tiger and beaver feedings. If the reptile house is a family favorite, don’t miss the Komodo Dragon and Crocodile Monitor Egg Hunt at 1:30 p.m.

Cost: Free!
When: April 18
Where: 3001 Connecticut Ave., NW Washington, DC 
Online: tinybeans.com 

—Elissa Olechnovich and Meghan Yudes Meyers

RELATED STORIES:

25 Ways to Reuse Plastic Easter Eggs

10 Ways to Eat Eggs After the Big Hunt Is Over

Cadbury Hatches Plan for a Limited-Edition White Chocolate Egg

 

The calendar’s new year may have passed, but the biggest celebration of the year in many parts of the world is still to come! Celebrating and honoring family, the Chinese New Year offers families a chance to bring in some good luck for the upcoming year (tell your kids to clean the house—it’s lucky!) Find the best ways to join in on the Lunar New Year celebrations in Portland by reading on for more. Welcome the Year of the Dog in a fantastic way!

photo: liana via flickr

See the Lan Su Chinese Gardens
These Ming Dynasty style gardens are one of the premiere attractions of Chinatown and Portland. If you only go once a year, don’t miss out on their biggest celebration! Weekends from February 16th  through March 4th, you’ll find special treats like lion dances, Chinese folk art, calligraphy demonstrations, martial arts practices, and family crafts to join in. And the kids will also get the chance to add to the Wishing Tree! For a really special night, grab tickets ahead of time for the evening Lantern Viewing, where the garden glows bright with light, and a dragon procession ends the evening.

Feb. 16 through Mar. 4
Lan Su Chinese Gardens
239 NW Everett St., Portland
503-228-8131
Online: lansugarden.org

Visit the Chinese New Year Cultural Fair
This giant fair has been around for over seventeen years, celebrating the rich Chinese traditions of the Portland community! Fun for the whole family, the festival this year celebrates the Year of the Dog. Your kids will love to see the martial arts demonstrations, lots of children’s games, folk dances, and a special lion dance from the White Lotus Lion Dance Team, who perform on high poles called Jongs. Past all that, the fair is chance to taste the exciting treats from many vendors–everyone will be sure to find something they love!

Saturday, Feb 10
Oregon Convention Center
777 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd. Portland
Online: portlandchinesetimes.com/2018-year-dogfair/

photo: judy via yelp

Visit Portland’s History
Portland’s Chinatown has a rich history — it was once the second-largest Chinatown in the United States! With the new Portland Chinatown Museum set to open later in 2018, you’ll have to save your curiosity for a bit later. Until then, get the family to the Portland Art Museum for it’s 4,000 artifact-strong collection of Asian artwork, like ceramics and objects found in tombs. Children 17 and under are always free.

$19.99/adults, free for children 17 and under
1219 SW Park Avenue
Portland, OR
503-226-2811
Online: portlandartmuseum.org

Enjoy the Library’s Lunar New Year
Multnomah County Library is not missing out on the fun of the Lunar New Year! They’ll be having a few celebrations at libraries around the county, most notably at Central. Join them for fun cultural performances, readings, snacks, and crafts for the little ones.

Sun., Feb 18, 2 – 4 p.m.
801 SW 10th Avenue
Portland, OR
503-988-5123
Online: multcolib.org/events

 

photo: Walter via flicker

Make Your Own Hong Bao
Bright red envelopes (hong bao) are traditionally given out during the Chinese New Year (especially to kids), filled with money. The red color symbolizes good luck, and the money is a wish for a prosperous year. Make your own with these instructions from the Lan Su Chinese Garden, fill them with a few coins, and have your kids give them to neighbors and friends this year!

Instructions here: lansugarden.org

What’s your favorite Lunar New Year celebration? Tell us in the comments below!

—Katrina Emery

Sure, it felt like summer a week ago, but colder, wetter (perhaps even snowy?) weather is on its way. When seeking shelter from the storms, consider one of these spots for a kid-friendly diversion that doesn’t involve a screen (at least in the traditional sense).

photo: Canstruction/Brookfield Place

Canstruction 2016 at Brookfield Place
The amazing, unconventional canned-food-sculptural-competition-for-good that is Canstruction returns to Brookfield Place on November 3. Teams of architects, engineers, and contractors and the students they mentor spend weeks planning elaborate, large-scale structures made entirely out of unopened cans of food — and then have one night to build them.

The sculptures are on display for two weeks, and then all food is donated to City Harvest. (You can bring along some cans to donate, too; last year, the event yielded 80,000 pounds of food!) The Society for Design Administration competition is juried by a panel of professional designers, architects and culinary professionals, giving top honors in categories such as Most Cans, Best Structural Integrity and Best Use of Labels. (You can vote too, for Audience Favorite.)

Canstruction
Nov. 3-Nov. 16
10 a.m. – 8 p.m., daily
Tickets: Free
Brookfield Place, Street and Lobby Level
230 Vesey St.
Battery Park City
Online: artsbrookfield.com

photo: Jonathan Dorado

Philippe Parreno: My Room Is Another Fish Bowl at The Brooklyn Museum
French artist Philippe Parreno’s “My Room Is Another Fish Bowl” is described as “a delightful, participatory work of art that encourages audiences to contemplate the passage of time and shifting patterns of light and atmospheric conditions.” (It’s also really cool.)

Currently installed in the glass-fronted pavilion of the Brooklyn Museum, the work comprises approximately 150 colorful, fish-shaped Mylar balloons that float a various heights. The fish gently move through the enclosed space in response to both human interaction and climatic changes. Technically, you don’t even have to enter the museum to see the work, but for sporty types especially, we recommend heading inside to take in “Who Shot Sports: A Photographic History 1843 to the Present, which runs through Jan. 8 2017. Note: To keep the Parreno work safe during certain programs and events, this exhibition may not be on view at all times, so call ahead to be sure it’s up and floating!

Through Nov. 20
Tickets: $16/adults; free/ages 19 and under
Martha A. and Robert S. Rubin Pavilion, 1st Fl.
Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Pkwy.
Crown Heights
718-638-8500
Online: brooklynmuseum.org

photo: New Museum

Pipilotti Rist: Pixel Forest at The New Museum
The New Museum just opened the first New York survey of the work of Swiss artist Pipilotti Rist. A pioneer of video art and multimedia installations, Rist’s mesmerizing works envelop viewers in sensual, vibrantly-colored kaleidoscopic projections that mix nature and technology. The immersive exhibit occupies the three main floors of the museum, and invites visitors to sit (and lie) back and take in the truly stunning views.

Through Jan. 15, 2017
Tickets: $16/adults; free/ages 15-18, free with adult/ages 14 and under
235 Bowery
877-500-1932
Online: newmuseum.org

photo: The Jewish Museum/Will Ragozzino/SocialShutterbug.com

Take Me (I’m Yours) at The Jewish Museum
When visiting a museum with the kids, you may spend a fair amount of time saying, “Don’t touch!” “Take Me (I’m Yours)” at The Jewish Museum not only invites visitors to touch the art on display, it’s OK to take a bit of the show home.

Based on an exhibition mounted in London in 1995, this show features works by more than 40 artists from different generations and from all over the world, working in media ranging from clothes to metal to candy. (The red, white and blue “carpet” in that photo above? Individually-wrapped piece of candy, of which there is an “endless supply.”)

A meditation on art world convention, consumerism, the role of museums and act of sharing in Jewish life, Take Me I’m Yours includes work from Yoko Ono, Uri Aran, Christian Boltanski, Rachel Rose, Tino Sehgal and many more.

Take Me (I’m Yours)
Through Feb. 5, 2017
Tickets: $15/adults, free/visitors 18 and under
The Jewish Museum
Fifth Avenue at 92nd Street
Upper West Side
212-423-3337
Online: thejewishmuseum.org

What’s your next rainy day destination? Share it in the comments!

— Mimi O’Connor

This year marks 150 big ones for the children’s classic, Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, and The Morgan Library is celebrating with a beautiful exhibit worthy of the hoopla. See Lewis Carroll’s pocket watch and microscope, take a selfie with an Alice illustration, and then marvel at the original manuscript he presented to his muse Alice Liddell, the same manuscript that hasn’t left the shores of England for 30 years — and isn’t likely to do so again any time soon. If you’ve got an Alice addict, this is the show for you!

Big story, Small Space

This exhibit, while incredible in its scope, is diminutive: a single room painted canary yellow serves as the setting for celebrating how one story told in a boat one summer afternoon to a trio of rapt daughters ignited the collective imagination of children for a century and a half. There are a few seats sprinkled around the room alongside baskets of various versions of the tale; perfect for passing some time with the wee ones.

But for sure, you’re likely to be just as engaged as the kids, as the exhibit does give ample and appropriate attention to the creative tensions that beset the collaboration between author Charles Lutwidge Dodson, a.k.a. Lewis Carrolll, and his fine illustrator, Sir  John Tenniel. (It’s the latter’s images of Alice and friends that became iconic.)

Especially for Kids

More interesting to kids will be Carroll’s original pocket watch — just like the one his beloved rabbit used — or a beautiful golden microscope that stirred his imagination. Kids can also enjoy comparing the original hand-written manuscript, the very one Dodgson presented to the Alice, with the printed version, which is perched directly adjacent. The original Alice’s purse, with her name in needlepoint, is also in the show.

To make the most of your visit, stop by on Sunday afternoons, when a weekly Alice storytime appropriate for kids ages three to six will take place from 3-4 p.m.

If you or the kids want to do a deep dive before or after visiting the exhibit, check out the online version, which includes illustrations, photos and even a playlist of music inspired by the beloved (and trippy) tale. “White Rabbit” anyone?

Alice: 150 Years of Wonderland
The Morgan Library & Museum
Through October 11, 2015
Tickets: $18/adults; free/children 12 and under; $12/children 13-16; Free/Fridays, 7-9 p.m.
225 Madison Ave. at 36th St.
Midtown
212-685-0008
Online: themorgan.org

Will you heading to The Morgan to see the original “Alice”? Tell us in the comments below!

—Rachel Aydt

 

Not sure how to spend your next weekend in San Diego? If you’re looking for some family fun that’s just off the beaten path, spend a day at the famous Kobey’s Swap Meet. Swap meets are a fun way to treasure hunt with your cuties, and a great chance to teach about recycling, reusing and handling money (if they are old enough), all while feeling the thrill of a scavenger hunt and the score of a deal.

Kobey’s Swap Meet
Kobey’s is the ultimate stop for swap meet swag. It has many pint-sized bargain-hunting treasures. Scour the tables and bins for LEGO, Polly Pocket dolls and accessories, Barbies and more. There are both swap meet and garage-sale style booths for your little ones to explore. Set an amount they can spend (let them learn to budget), then send the little pirates off to scour the terrain for their bountiful loot (with mom or dad’s supervision, of course).

Sweet Treats
If the little swashbucklers need a bite to eat, there are lots of places to take a bit. Traditional hamburgers and hot dogs are available (a little on the expensive and greasy side). But we recommend saving the money and appetites for the other treats. Popcorn is a hit with the pint-sized type and snow cones are big and fun to eat (especially on hot summer days). There’s also a mini-donut stand where kids can watch them make the sweet treats.

Savvy Swap Meet Tips

  • Sunblock is key. Even on overcast days, be prepared to spray and wear a hate. Brining a bottle of water is also recommended.
  • Vendors don’t take credit cards. So bring cash. Smaller bills will be appreciated.
  • Bring your own canvas bag to stash all your goodies.
  • While the swap meet is open all weekend, Sunday is the best day to score treasures.
  • Go online and print a coupon for $1 off adult admission.
  • You can rent a single stroller ($6) or a double cool cart ($7) to wheel your little munchkins around.
  • The bathrooms are located at the back of the meet near the food stand. While they are porta-potties, there is an attendant on duty and a place to wash hands.
  • Parking is free!

Hours: Fri. – Sun., 7 a.m. – 3 p.m.
Cost: Fri.: $1/Adults; Sat. & Sun., $2/Adults; Free/Kids under 11

3500 Sports Arena Blvd.
San Diego, Ca 92110
Online: Kobeys.com

— Monique Walsh (photos too)

The fall art season is in full swing and NYC museums once again prove that cultural edification can be family-friendly and fun. Check out these six must-see exhibits on view now, which offer everything from Matisse masterworks and “Mad Men” art to cooing live pigeons and cartoon craziness.

photo: Alice Perry

“Henri Matisse: The Cut-Outs” at MoMA

The Art: It’s the hottest ticket in town, and the lines prove it. The Museum of Modern Art’s “Henri Matisse: The Cut-Outs” is the most extensive presentation of Matisse’s cut-outs ever mounted. In these works, the artist used scissors to cut colored paper and then arranged them into compositions. Featuring over 100 cut-outs, the exhibit highlights Matisse’s child-like exuberance for art, color, and life. Although you’ve probably seen much of Matisse’s work on coffee mugs and T-shirts, seeing the originals with your own eyes will  help you realize that yes, this artist was a master.

Fun for Kids: Kids can easily relate to Matisse’s deceptively simple artwork. Many have already unknowingly created artwork inspired by Matisse, such as collages and paper dolls. MoMA is hosting two exhibit-related workshops designed for kid artists: Drawing with Scissors for kids ages five to seven, and Cut It Out! for the younger set.

Insider Tip: Timed tickets are required for this hugely popular exhibit. MoMA members, however, may enter at any time by showing a valid membership card.

Museum of Modern Art
11 W. 53rd St.
Midtown 
212-708-9400
Through Feb. 8, 2015
Daily, 10:30 a.m.- 5:30 p.m.; Fri. 10:30 a.m. – 8 p.m.
$25/adults; free for children under 16 and Fri., 4-8 p.m.
Online: moma.org
 
 

photo: Michael Scoggins. Explosion Drawing #5, 2014. Marker, prism color on paper. Courtesy of the Artists and Freight + Volume Gallery

“Drawn to Language” at Children’s Museum of the Arts

The Art: Considering that most kids (and parents too!) today are more adept at handling the keyboard than the pen, the Children’s Museum of the Arts exhibit “Drawn to Language” is a much-needed reminder that handwriting is an art. In this show, words and letters on canvases are given personality through shape, color and texture. Top artists like Jack Pierson, Ed Ruscha and Jenny Holzer have work on display in the exhibit.

Fun for Kids: Young museum visitors will especially dig fun artwork like Samuel Jablon’s mirror-adorned collage “Get Dirty” and Michael Scoggins’ “Explosive Drawing”, a supersized notepaper filled with doodles. During the exhibit’s run, CMA is offering a ton of art-meets-word workshops like “Wooden Block Letter Reproduction” and “Anthropomorphic Alphabets.”

Children’s Museum of the Arts
103 Charlton St.
West Village
212-274-0986
Through Jan. 11, 2015
Mon. & Wed., noon-5 p.m.; closed Tues.; Thurs. & Fri., noon-6 p.m.; Sat. & Sun., 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
$11/person; pay what you wish on Thurs., 4-6 p.m.
Onlinecmany.com

 


 photo: “We Won’t Be Any Trouble” by Mac Conner, MCNY

“Mac Conner: A New York Life” at Museum of the City of New York

The Art: One of New York’s original “Mad Men,” Mac Conner was a brilliant illustrator whose advertising images stood out from the pack during New York City’s golden age of publishing after WWII. His heart, soul and humor are evident in the more than 70 original artworks on display in Mac Conner: A New York Life at the Museum of the City of New York.

Fun for Kids: In many of Conner’s illustrations, children are the stars of the show, in work ranging from cold medicine advertisements to images accompanying magazine stories. Be sure to check out one of the family workshops like “Covering Conner,” where you create your own book cover, or “Mad for Mac” during which kids can design their own ad for the museum.

Insider Tip: What’s really fun about this show is seeing the original artwork as drawn by Conner — not just copies of ads from Life magazine. You can actually see and appreciate the ink blotting and different gradations of color.

Museum of the City of New York
1220 Fifth Ave.,
Upper East Side
212-534-1672
Through Jan. 19, 2015
Daily, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.
Suggested admission: $10/adults; free for children under 12

Online: mcny.org

photo: Alice Perry

“Crossing Brooklyn” at the Brooklyn Museum

The Art: The artwork in the “Crossing Brooklyn” exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum is as varied as the borough itself. Featuring more than 100 works from 35 artists, the show includes virtually every medium — from sculpture and installation to video and performance. This survey underscores Brooklyn’s reputation as a robust and vibrant creative center.

Fun for Kids: The show has a ton of unexpected and quirky art pieces, such as a birdhouse with live cooing pigeons inside. Kids will also gravitate toward the life-size horse made from cork; visitors are invited to write a note and pin it to the sculpture’s base. And don’t forget to look up in the rotunda to see kites decorated with huge photos of kids.

Insider Tip: FYI: In the rotunda area, there are some photographs that include nudity. Make sure all of the art is appropriate for your child before you take them through.

Brooklyn Museum
200 Eastern Pkwy.
Prospect Heights
718-638-5000
Through Jan. 4, 2015
Wed. & Fri.-Sun., 11 a.m.-6 p.m.; Thurs., 11 a.m.-10 p.m.
$16/adults, free for children
Online: brooklynmuseum.org

 

photo: Alice Perry

“What’s Up, Doc?” at Museum of the Moving Image

The Art: Two words: Bugs Bunny. Or better yet: Chuck Jones, the wildly (or shall we say, “Wile E.”) inventive and talented animator behind Bugs, Daffy Duck, Road Runner, Wile E. Coyote and plenty of others. The Museum of the Moving Image’s exhibit “What’s Up, Doc: The Animation Art of Chuck Jones” celebrates Jones’s amazing ability to create cartoon characters with big-sized and distinctive personalities that will likely outlive and outlast Dora and SpongeBob. The exhibit boasts 136 original sketches and drawings, monitors screening 23 of Jones’s films and interactive stations.

Fun for Kids: Kids will immediately dive for the bean bag chairs to watch cool-before-its-time Duck Amok. At the interactive animation station, kids can take on the role of director and create moves for Jones’s characters. At the Drop-In Moving Image Studio on Saturdays, kids can direct their own stop-action flick using Jones’s artwork as a starting point.

Insider Tip: Strollers are not permitted in the exhibition and interactive sections of the museum.

The Museum of Moving Image
36-01 35 Ave.
Astoria
718-777-6888
Through Jan. 19, 2015
Wed. & Thurs., 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m.; Fri., 10:30 a.m.- 8 p.m.; Sat. & Sun., 11:30 a.m.- 7 p.m. 
$12/adults; $6/children; free for children under 3; free Fri., 4-8 p.m.

Online: movingimage.us

photo: Marcos Stafne, Brooklyn Children’s Museum

“More Than Meets the I” at Brooklyn Children’s Museum

The Art: “More than Meets the ‘I’” at the Brooklyn Children’s Museum is a hands-on and interactive science exhibit that gets kids excited about science — specifically, concepts that you can’t see with the naked eye. While the words “nanotechnology” and “molecular biology” will surely induce a zoned-out state in most kids, the super cool stations at this exhibit will jolt your kids awake and translate those big ideas into digestible bite-size pieces.

Fun for Kids: This is one exhibit where the phrase “Don’t touch” will never pass your lips. Each area encourages budding scientists to touch, test and learn. The big kid-pleaser station is Commodore the Robotic Fish. Using a touch screen, kids can control the movements of Commodore who is made with a 3-D printer and swims in a real, gigantic aquarium.

Brooklyn Children’s Museum
145 Brooklyn Ave.
Crown Heights
718-735-4400
Through Jan. 19
Tues.-Sun., 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
$9/person; free Thurs., 3-5 p.m. and every third Thurs., 3-7 p.m.
Onlinebrooklynkids.org

 

What’s your must-hit exhibit of the season? Tell us in the comments below!

— Alice Perry

 

If the gray winter slush and sludge have left you saying, “Ewww,” every time you go outside, fear not.  A surefire way to inject some color and fun back into your family’s life is to check out one of the many new kid-friendly museum exhibits around the city. From graffiti art to Italian Futurism, these seven exhibits will leave you pumped and ready for the springtime.

“City as Canvas” at Museum of the City of New York

The Art: Love it or hate it, there’s no denying that graffiti is an art form. And the Museum of the City of New York wholeheartedly agrees. “City as Canvas” relives those days back in the ’70s and ’80s when renegade artists like Lee Quiñones and Keith Haring spray painted any public space available with curlicue tags and cartoon images.

Fun with Kids: Kids will love the bold, in-your-face colors and the contagious energy of the art work. Some upcoming family programs include designing your own tag in a flipbook and helping to create a large-scale mural at the museum.

Insider Tip: Sure, you don’t want to encourage your kids to deface public property, but most of the artworks here are canvas paintings and sketchbooks -- not subway doors (although there are plenty of photos documenting them).

Museum of City of New York
1220 Fifth Ave., Upper East Side
Phone: 212-534-1672
Exhibition Dates: Now to Aug. 24, 2014
Hours: Daily, 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

Cost: Suggested admission: $10/adults, free for kids under 12.

Image courtesy of Alice Perry

Tell us about the last art exhibit you saw with your family in a comment.

-Alice Perry