• Kanikapila ma Kaiwiʻula

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    E hoʻokani pila pū kākou! Bring your ʻukulele, or borrow one of ours! Join in to learn some new techniques, share moʻolelo or just enjoy the music with members of the ʻUkulele Guild of Hawaiʻi.

  • Museum After Hours

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    Celebrate and explore ʻaʻaʻā (lava tube) biodiversity from Hawai'i! ʻElala ʻAʻaʻā o Hawaiʻi features Bishop Museum's renewed lava tube "caving" experience that highlights Hawaiian underground biodiversity.

  • Sounds of the Ocean

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    Prepare to embark on an extraordinary journey that will immerse you in the wonders of the deep blue.

  • Mālama Honua

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    Mālama Honua Public Charter School presents a special day at Bishop Museum bringing together ʻohana and community for a vibrant, family-friendly celebration.

  • Wehiwehi ma Kaiwiʻula

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    Join Wehiwehi Cohort 2 for an evening of performance, conversation, and creative exchange at Bishop Museum.

  • The Stars Tonight: Trivia Dome

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    Join us for the Stars Tonight at Bishop Museum! Examine the skies with a presenter in our planetarium, featuring the stars, planets, astronomical highlights, and other stories of the current season.

  • Wehiwehi ma Kaiwiʻula

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    Join Wehiwehi Cohort 2 for an evening of performance, conversation, and creative exchange at Bishop Museum.

  • Niho ʻOki Workshop

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    Returning by popular demand, 'Ōlohe Umi Kai will lead participants in creating niho ʻoki, Hawaiian shark tooth utility knives, traditionally used for food preparation, wood carving, hair cutting, stripping bark for kapa, and self-defense by makaʻāinana. No prior experience is necessary.

  • Niho ʻOki Workshop

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    Returning by popular demand, 'Ōlohe Umi Kai will lead participants in creating niho ʻoki, Hawaiian shark tooth utility knives, traditionally used for food preparation, wood carving, hair cutting, stripping bark for kapa, and self-defense by makaʻāinana. No prior experience is necessary.

  • Artist Talk & Dinner

    Bishop Museum 1525 Bernice Street, US

    Bishop Museum's newest exhibition Ea Mai ʻEiwa: Patterns of Practice features works by Nālani Kanakaʻole (1946–2026), Sig Zane, and Kūhaʻoʻīmaikalani Zane, a family of artists from Hilo, Hawaiʻi.