SPRING 2026 NEWS: TOM GREGG

NELSON ATKINS MUSEUM

Tom Gregg’s print from the permanent collection is included in new exhibition

The Lawrence Lithography Workshop: MORE Highlights from the Collection
Jan 24, 2026 - Jul 26, 2026

About The Lawrence Lithography Workshop Collection at the Nelson-Atkins

Comprising selections from the collection of The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, this exhibition continues the museum’s celebration of creativity, talent, and collaborative spirit synonymous with The Lawrence Lithography Workshop (TLLW).

Master Printer Michael Sims (born 1944) established TLLW in Lawrence, Kansas, in 1979 before moving it to Sunland Park, New Mexico, in 1997. Since 2001, the shop has operated out of Kansas City, Missouri, drawing artists as diverse as the subject matter and techniques represented in their prints. Artists have come from around the corner and across the country. Some are well-versed in printmaking, while others are new to lithography and interested in exploring its possibilities. Many have returned again and again—a testament to the shop’s reputation and Sims’s expert guidance.

Among the hundreds of artists who have collaborated with Sims at TLLW are the following whose prints are on view in this exhibition: Ron Adams, Richard Dishinger, Archie Scott Gobber, Tom Gregg, Tom Hück, Benito Huerta, Kelley Kapfer, Alden Mason, Ed Paschke, Roger Shimomura, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Robert Stackhouse, Akio Takamori, Tom Uttech, Theodore Waddell, and William T. Wiley.

Over the years, generous gifts and purchases, including a recent significant gift from C. Richard Belger and Evelyn Belger, resulted in a repository of prints made at TLLW between 1980 and 2018. The archive ensures the legacy of this influential print shop, the artists with whom it has worked, and the community it has fostered.

Organized by The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art.

Tom Gregg, Winner, 2004
lithograph, 20 ½ x 17 in.

The artist with his work at the museum.

NEWLY ARRIVED AT THE GALLERY

Two of noted realist Tom Gregg’s paintings from 2019 just arrived at the gallery.
Gas Can (2019, oil on panel, 34x34 in.) is brilliant painted and hauntingly fitting for the current moment. A quiet composition at a larger scale than the artist often works, the painting is a powerful statement highly relevant to our times.

Gas Can, 2019
oil on panel, 34x34 in.
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8 Ball, Egg and
Lemon, 2019
oil on panel21x21 in.

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