From Philly and the Pa. suburbs to South Jersey and Delaware, what would you like WHYY News to cover? Let us know! As the election draws closer and polls grow tighter and advertisements get louder, many in Pennsylvania are experiencing feelings of voter fatigue . A recent Pew Research Center poll shows two-thirds of adults are “exhausted” by politics .

On Monday, Philadelphia will once again be at the center of the national show when Vice President Kamala Harris brings her whirlwind campaign to the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art with a major rally on the eve of the election. Meanwhile, inside the Art Museum is a much quieter display of political messaging. “What Times Are These?” opened Oct.

19 and is a sparsely hung exhibition of work by artists using the power of suggestion or outright silence to make their political points. “I think many of us have encountered political art that can feel like we’re being hammered over the head,” said curator Eleanore Nairne. “It’s not always the best way to appeal to people’s humanity or to encourage people to be dwelling with work.

” Nairne is the museum’s new curator of contemporary and modern art, a position she started in February. “What Times are These?” is her first exhibition in that role, designed to be both relevant to the current moment and a respite from it. “I thought it would be interesting to do something about artists who are political, but in more lateral ways,” she said.

“Maybe not.