Lifelong Learners

The Walters Art Museum is a destination for adults who love to learn and enjoy the benefits of enriching art experiences. No matter your age, you can deepen your engagement with art through our diverse and engaging public programs, private group tours, self-guided tour resources, or public tours, all of which are free.

Two visitors talk in a gallery

Private Group Tours

Engage with centuries of human creativity and history at the Walters Art Museum through tours, which create opportunities for exploration, discussion, and creative expression in the galleries. Groups of 10 or more planning a visit can request an interactive group tour or a self-guided visit during public hours.

Volunteer

The Walters Art Museum relies on the dedication and commitment of volunteers who support the mission of the museum. As a Walters volunteer, you can contribute your time and skills to create a place where people of every background can be touched by art. We are looking for dynamic and engaging individuals to join our team of passionate volunteers. Several types of volunteer opportunities are available.

A volunteer smiles near the entrance of the Walters Art Museum

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Adorning the Afrofuture

A golden necklace with a stone set in the center made by Douriean Fletcher

Douriean Fletcher is a self-taught jewelry artist whose work spans television, film, and independent design. She made history by becoming the first jeweler ever included in the Motion Picture Costumers Union. And from April 18 to August 9, 2026, visitors to the Walters Art Museum will have the opportunity to see her jewelry up close in Douriean Fletcher: Jewelry of the Afrofuture.

Illuminated Ideas

One of the most dynamic galleries at the Walters might also be one of its smallest. Tucked just inside the entrance to the Medieval galleries on the third floor of the Centre Street building, there sits a snug, windowless room. This space is the Manuscript and Rare Book Gallery, and every six months, it boasts a new exhibition that shows off treasures from the Walters’ renowned collection of medieval manuscripts, rare books, and more.

Heavy Metal

While many artists seek to root themselves in a single form of expression, Stephanie Mercedes describes herself as an “anti-disciplinary artist.” She works in nearly every medium, from opera and soundscape to sculpture and dance, but it’s metalwork sculpture that she returns to most often. Learn more about how she created her work We Were Treated Like Numbers Rather Than Stars (2025), now on view in the museum’s Centre Street Atrium.

Art with an Interconnected Spirit

An unusual cacophony of sound recently filled the Walters Art Museum’s Palazzo Building. Hammering, sawing, and drilling could be heard as hard-at-work contractors de-installed and renovated the museum’s North Court galleries. These spaces saw their first major changes in 40 years to make way for Latin American Art / Arte Latinoamericano, the first long-term installation dedicated to this area of the museum’s permanent collection.

Layers of History

Jackie Milad’s light-filled studio in Baltimore’s Woodberry neighborhood is a cacophony of color. Her current work-in-progress covers much of its south-facing wall. Standing atop sturdy orange scaffolding with a long-handled brush in hand, she applies another layer of paint to a small swath of the fuchsia canvas on which she’s already made many marks. Go behind the scenes with Milad as she creates two large-scale tapestry collages for installation in the Walters’ Ancient World galleries.

The Walters at Ninety

The Walters Art Museum is among America’s most distinctive museums, forging connections between people and art that spans seven millennia from cultures around the world. This fall, the Walters will reach a celebratory milestone: 90 years of operation as a public cultural institution in Baltimore. Take a trip back through time to see where the Walters has been, where it is now, and where the institution is headed in the next 90 years.

Ethiopia at the Crossroads

The Walters Art Museum presents a major exhibition of Ethiopian art and history in Ethiopia at the Crossroads. Examining Ethiopian art as representative of the nation’s history, the exhibition demonstrates the enormous cultural significance of this often-overlooked African nation through the themes of cross-cultural exchange and the human role in the creation and movement of art objects across the Mediterranean region and within the African continent.

Across Asia

Following a multi-year reinstallation project, which included a complete renovation of the Level 4 galleries in the Centre Street building, the Walters Art Museum is proud to present a landmark installation of its core Asian and Islamic collections, brought together for the first time in Across Asia: Arts of Asia and the Islamic World.