Bring a POP of color to your life at Nature POP! — now open at Tulsa Botanic Garden! This new exhibition, featuring sculptures made from more than 800,000 LEGO® pieces, explores the beauty of nature through contemporary, stylized, and colorful displays. Blending art, science, and innovation, the larger-than-life sculptures in Nature POP! invite you to consider: just as LEGO bricks interconnect, how is everything in nature interconnected?
Whimsical, bold, and bombastic, Nature POP! will delight and inspire the whole family!
The exhibit opens Saturday, March 16 with spring break activities planned throughout the week of March 18-22. The Garden will be open on Monday, March 18. Regular hours are Tuesday – Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Garden will close at 2:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 13.
Starting April 4, the Garden will be open on select Thursdays until 8 p.m. with evening Bands & Blooms concerts from 6 to 8 p.m. Visitors can bring chairs or blankets to listen to live music on the lawn and stroll the Garden to experience spring blooms and Sean Kenney’s Nature POP!
Regular admission to the Garden during the exhibit (March 16-May 9) will be free for Garden members; $15 for ages 16 and up, $10 for ages 3 to 15. Children 2 and under are free. Field trip information can be found here.
Guest passes, reciprocal admission and onsite discounted pricing (other than Museums for All pricing below) will not apply for regular admission during the exhibit. (March 16-May 9, 2024)
Museums for All – Discounted tickets
Recipients of SNAP or WIC benefits can receive discounted general admission by showing a valid EBT and photo ID. Oklahoma Foster families can receive discounted pricing below by showing their Oklahoma Foster Parent Exclusive Membership Card. Prices for Museums for All (SNAP/WIC/Oklahoma Foster Parent) are $6 for ages 16 and up, $4 for ages 3-15. A limit of 4 tickets may be purchased with this rate, one time per household.
Sean Kenney’s Nature POP! exhibit at the Garden is made possible by funding from the Etta Mae Avery Trust.
This project was made possible by Oklahoma Arts Sector ARPA Grants, an investment made by leaders of the State of Oklahoma, led by the Oklahoma Arts Council in partnership with Allied Arts OKC and Arts Alliance Tulsa.