NARM Quarterly Summer 2025 | Page 13

meet our newest narm members

Norman, Oklahoma

405-329-4523

www.normanfirehouse.com

The Firehouse Art Center (Firehouse) is a non-profit 501(c)(3) corporation located in Norman, Oklahoma. Founded in 1970 as a community arts center, the Firehouse operates out of a city-owned building which previously served as a fire station. Today, it houses professional visual arts studios and classrooms that provide visual arts education programs for all ages, as well as a gallery space for exhibitions and a permanent gift shop. We promote visual arts awareness and accessibility, provide art exhibitions, and offer opportunities that support local artists.

National Canal Museum|Delaware & Lehigh National Heritage Corridor, Inc.

Easton, Pennsylvania

610-923-3548

delawareandlehigh.org

Easton’s Hugh Moore Park is a picturesque extension of the City of Easton where America’s golden age of canals is on full display. With more than two miles of restored Lehigh Canal, we are a canal boat attraction unlike any other in Pennsylvania and the rest of the Northeast. One of the country’s largest canal heritage museums, the 520-acre park nestled between the Lehigh Canal and Lehigh River is a throwback to the years when

The Avenue Concept

Providence, Rhode Island

401-490-0929

theavenueconcept.org

The Avenue Concept is a 501c3 with a mission to intentionally curate and skillfully produce public visual art with artists and communities in the US. We are offering walking tours of our public portfolio of nearly 50 sculptures and murals in Providence, and have a Paint Bar at our head quarters that serves as a civic space and art making space.

Norman Firehouse Art Center

mules pulling canal boats on narrow towpaths was a common sight in much of the United States east of the Mississippi River. The Delaware & Lehigh National Heritage Corridor interprets this fascinating period of American history in the park through the National Canal Museum and rides on the 110-passenger Josiah White II canal boat (June-October). Explore our fun, hands-on exhibits highlighting 19th-century canal life and technology.