Facility Rental

Celebrate your event at one of Lancaster's most unique and inspiring venues - the Grubb Mansion! 

The Lancaster Museum of Art provides an elegant, intimate, venue for your special event. Your  guests will experience the style and grace of the historic Grubb Mansion while surrounded by the "best available art" that adornes the Museum galleries.

The Grubb Mansion offers a truly unique experience for all types of events including:

  • Cocktail Receptions
  • Corporate Meetings and Seminars
  • Bridal and Baby Showers
  • Gala Dinners
  • Weddings
  • Luncheons
  • Club Meetings

Rental Spaces Include:

1.) Museum Galleries (two floors)

2.) Portico Only (surrounded by the beautiful Musser Park!)

3.) Museum and Portico

Please contact the Museum today to discuss your upcoming artful event!

Contact

Elle Lamboy, Membership & Special Events Coordinator

P. 717.394.3497 E-mail: elamboy@lmapa.org

 

 

Featured Lectures

Artist Talk with Gail Gray

Thursday, June 7 7:00pm

Join us at the Museum as Gail Gray shares the motivation behind her fresh batch of new works and what they represent. Gray will touch on the influence of science on these works, which she describes as being abstract representations of a physical, organic process.

Cost:
Free for LMA Members
$5 for non-members
$1 for non-members students

Archived Lectures

2012

  • Artist Talk with Gail Gray
  • Shauna Frischkorn, Professor of Photography, Millersville University
  • With exhibiting artists Virginia Caputo, Tom Debiec & Barbara Dombach
  • 2011

  • Don Perlis artist’s Lecture: Narrative Reborn
  • The Structure of the Perceptual Moment in Outdoor Painting: Getting Inside the Painter’s Mind
  • 2010

  • Artists Panel Discussion: Zeuxis: The Common Object Exhibition
  • 2009

  • R. Scott Wright: Aerial Landscapes and Patterns of Nature / R. Scott Wright: Paintings Exhibition
  • Stanley I Grand, Ph.D. : Constantine Kermes: I Hear America Singing Exhibition
  • Thomas H. Garver: Trains that Passed in the Night: O. Winston Link’s Railroad Photographs and How He