Cameron Art Museum's 'Sacred Geometry' Glassworks Exhibit Runs Through May 2026
Cameron Art Museum's Sacred Geometry glassworks exhibit runs Nov 2025–May 2026 in Wilmington, NC. A six-month visual arts anchor worth visiting.
Mar 29 2026
1 min read

There's something quietly powerful about an art exhibit that asks you to slow down and study light itself. This fall, Cameron Art Museum opens a months-long showcase that does exactly that — inviting Wilmington residents and visitors to experience the intersection of glass, geometry, and spirituality through the hands of one deeply committed artist.
Event Summary
Magic, Light, and Sacred Geometry: Glassworks by Frederick G. Kahl opens November 21, 2025, and runs daily through May 24, 2026, at Cameron Art Museum, 3201 South 17th Street, Wilmington, NC 28412. The exhibition features glassworks and drawings born from Kahl's decade-long exploration of light, culminating in a summer 2025 residency at Starworks, a 501(c)(3) nonprofit arts center in Star, NC. With a six-month run spanning Wilmington's busiest tourism season, this is the kind of anchor programming that positions the Cape Fear region as a serious visual arts destination.
Fast Facts
- Dates: November 21, 2025 – May 24, 2026 (open daily)
- Member Preview: Thursday, November 20, 2025 — guided tours at 11 AM and 2 PM, open access 10 AM–5 PM
- Opening Night Celebration: November 20, 2025, 6–9 PM
- Location: Cameron Art Museum, 3201 South 17th Street, Wilmington, NC 28412
- Admission: Check [cameronartmuseum.org](https://cameronartmuseum.org) for current rates; member events free for members
- Organizer: Cameron Art Museum in partnership with Starworks
- Key Highlight: Solo exhibition representing the culmination of artist Frederick G. Kahl's ten-year inquiry into light
What to Expect
This is a solo exhibition, not a festival — and that's the point. Attendees will find a focused gallery experience built around Kahl's glassworks and drawings, pieces that use sacred geometry as both a structural and spiritual framework. The works explore how light behaves when shaped by glass and precise geometric form, creating an experience that feels meditative and immersive.
The opening night celebration on November 20 from 6–9 PM offers the most social way to take it in, with a chance to engage with the work among fellow art enthusiasts. Members get early access that same day, including guided tours at 11 AM and 2 PM that should provide deeper context on Kahl's artistic process and his residency at Starworks.
Because the exhibit runs for six full months, there's no rush. You can visit once to take it in or return multiple times as the light changes with the seasons — an especially fitting dynamic for work that's fundamentally about illumination.
Why It's Worth Your Time
Cameron Art Museum is one of the Cape Fear region's primary nonprofit cultural institutions, and this exhibit underscores why. Rather than relying solely on rotating short-run shows or one-weekend events, the museum is offering sustained, substantive programming that rewards repeat visits and gives both locals and tourists a reliable reason to walk through the doors.
The partnership with Starworks — a respected nonprofit arts center in Star, NC, operating out of a repurposed mill in the Sandhills region — highlights the kind of cross-community collaboration that strengthens North Carolina's broader creative economy. Starworks offers public studios, galleries, and workshops in glass, ceramics, and metal, and Kahl's summer 2025 residency there directly shaped the work on display. That means this exhibit tells a story about the state's artistic infrastructure, not just one artist's vision.
Kahl, a New York City-based glass artist also known as "the Great Fredini," blends traditional glassmaking with modern techniques and has held past residencies at institutions including the Corning Museum of Glass and Tacoma Museum of Glass.
For Wilmington, the timing is strategic. The exhibit spans the spring and early summer months when tourist traffic along the South 17th Street corridor peaks. That's a real draw for local restaurants, shops, and hotels that benefit when visitors have one more compelling reason to extend a trip.
Practical Details
The museum is located at 3201 South 17th Street, a well-traveled corridor in Wilmington's tourism zone. Parking details are not specified by the museum for this exhibit, so visitors should check [cameronartmuseum.org](https://cameronartmuseum.org) or call ahead to confirm lot availability, especially on opening night.
Admission pricing is not listed on the museum's official site for this specific exhibit. Third-party sources list general admission at approximately $17 for adults, $14 for seniors, students, active military, and veterans, and $6 for ages 6–17 — though these figures may not reflect current 2025 rates. For the most current pricing, accessibility information, and any schedule changes, visit [cameronartmuseum.org](https://cameronartmuseum.org).
Whether you're a longtime museum member or someone who hasn't visited since your last school field trip, this is a worthwhile reason to make the drive down South 17th. Six months is generous. Don't let it slip by.

Daniel Price
Daniel Price brings a decade of experience advising developers and institutional investors on large-scale commercial real estate projects. Now based in Wilmington, he covers local business expansion, leasing trends, and the economics behind downtown redevelopment and land use shifts.
Related Posts
More stories from the same category
Recent Posts
Stay up to date with our latest stories
Subscribe to Newsletter
Provide your email to get email notification when we launch new products or publish new articles










