Sentences with phrase «museum also»

An interpretative museum also looks out into the bathtub.
Apart from holding an exhibition that explains the role of glaciers in the environment and the threats of global warming, the museum also aims to be an investigation center and monitor the evolution of glaciers in the region.
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The New Museum also presented The New — Jeff Koons's first solo exhibition in New York — in 1980.
The museum also purchased Chris Burden's 2006 Hot Wheels installation Metropolis II directly from the artist.
The Museum also provides programs for seniors and special needs individuals — such as the hearing impaired and people with Alzheimer's — as well as training for teachers in the arts.
Additionally, the museum also announced today that it has received $ 20 million from the television producer Marcy Carsey, who has been the chair of the museum's board since 2014.
The museum also touted its digital outreach in the news release.
The museum also owns one of the best collections of American photography, amounting to more than 30,000 exhibition prints by some 400 photographers.
The museum also owns a large number of paintings by Georgia O'Keeffe.
The museum also scored a coup by gathering 21 works produced by world - famous artist Robert Rauschenberg, who grew up in Port Arthur the son of religious fundamentalists.
The heavy focus on literal depictions of the black body in almost every room of the museum also runs the risk of essentializing it, I suggested to Coetzee.
In addition to the over 50,000 artifacts collected by Rivera, the museum also features one of Rivera's studios and some of his work, including a study for
The Figge Art Museum also currently holds the University of Iowa's collection, numbering some 12,000 works.
Following its 2013 expansion, which added 10,000 square feet of exhibition space for its substantial and important American art collection, the Colby Museum also will present Lois Dodd: Cultivating Vision (June 7 — August 31, 2014) and will re-envision its installation of highlights from the permanent collection.
The museum also features items of folk art by Mississippians, as well as British 19th - century portraits, Pre-Columbian ceramics and Mississippi quilts are also on display.
Devoting itself exclusively to California art, the Oakland Museum also received works - 49 of them - by California artists, including Terry Allen, William Brice, George Herms, Paul McCarthy, John McCracken, Michael McMillen, Eric Orr and Sabina Ott.
The museum also has notable collections of works by Alexander Calder, Louise Nevelson, Georgia O'Keeffe, Jasper Johns, Cindy Sherman, Agnes Martin, and Brice Marden.
In addition to those presented by the Egan family, the Museum also has three further works by the artist in its Collection: two sculptures Nude Girl Standing, 1965, and A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the G.P.O., 1990, and a work on paper, The Royal Hospital Where William's Soldiers Recuperated After Aughrim in 1692, 1969.
The Museum also makes space for emergent and meaningful artistic practices of today.
In addition to the over 50,000 artifacts collected by Rivera, the museum also features one of Rivera's studios and some of his work, including a study for Man at the Crossroads, the mural whose original version was commissioned for Rockefeller Center.
The Museum also has one of the world's greatest collections of glass art (including outstanding works by Louis Comfort Tiffany), plus quality holdings of decorative works and photographs.
The museum also returned its annual breakfast performance by Jennifer Rubell, in which an engaged couple stacked pieces of bread and butter for the public's consumption.
The museum also has a public library which contains over 100,000 books, 1,000 videos and 3,500 sound recordings.
The museum also has an extensive collection of American Impressionism and Gilded Age works; including paintings by Mary Cassatt, William Merritt Chase (1849 - 1916), Childe Hassam (1859 - 1935), and John Twachtman (1853 - 1902).
The Smithsonian American Art Museum also embraces the Luce Foundation Center for American Art and the Lunder Conservation Center.
The museum also has numerous video installations and time - based art works from contemporary artists like Nam June Paik (1932 - 2006), Marina Zurkow and digital artist Cory Arcangel (b. 1978).
[46][49][50] The Whitney Museum also exhibited several of the photographs on canvas in their 2014 retrospective.
The museum also houses temporary exhibitions featuring mostly large - scale contemporary works.
The museum also offers traveling exhibitions formed from its permanent collection to other museums and art institutes around Georgia and the Southeast.
The museum also independently acquired its first Cunningham décor, Jasper Johns's set for the 1968 dance Walkaround Time, in 2000.
The museum also released an advance exhibition program covering a wide swath of art history and drawing on distinguished collections around the world.
Besides exhibiting large paintings, the museum also adapt to exhibit great installations and sculptures.
The museum also houses one of the largest collections of American photography in the country.
In 2007, the museum also acquired the Adolpho Leirner Collection of Brazilian Constructive Art, the most prestigious collection of post-World War II Brazilian art in private hands.
The museum also has a central courtyard and a gorgeous modernist cafe.
The couple's Hamptons museum also presents works by both Leibers revealing their artistic journey through three exhibitions.
The museum also hired assistant curator Gabriel Ritter, who specializes in the art of postwar Japan.
What is less known is that the museum also has a significant collection of post-war American prints.
The museum also features opportunities to engage with science, such as an interactive model of the solar system.
The Museum also holds the preparatory drawings of two significant murals on the campus by José Clemente Orozco, one of «Los Tres Grandes» of Mexican Muralism, and Rico Lebrun.
The museum also added works by Richmond Barthe, Allan Rohan Crite, and Washington artists Laura Douglas, Sam Gilliam, Lois Mailou Jones, and Alma Thomas.
The museum also displays numerous traveling exhibitions throughout the year.
She has also developed exhibitions independently, including «The Neighbors» (2016 − 17), an exhibition series at the Bronx Museum of the Arts in New York, and «Let's Walk Together» (2016), a survey exhibition of Mario Garcia Torres at Museo Tamayo in Mexico City, a museum she also previously served as the director of, from 2009 to 2010.
The museum also hosted a series of dance and musical events held in a large mise - en - scene ballroom, designed with audio augmentation by the French conceptual artist, Phillipe Parreno.
The museum also holds an outstanding group of works by notable international artists such as Olafur Eliasson, Thomas Hirschhorn, and Franz West, and a significant number of works by women, artists of color, and artists whose work makes a profound social statement, including General Idea, Zoe Leonard, and Felix Gonzalez - Torres.
Later on, in autumn 1987, the exhibition of La Colección Sonnabend (The Sonnabend Collection), curated by Jean Louis Froment at the same museum also included a significant representation of the artist's work.
The museum also holds some works by foreign artists, among them Braque, Calder, Cézanne, Degas, Duchamp, Giacometti, Kandinsky, Mondrian, Monet, Jackson Pollock, Rodin, and Van Gogh.
The museum also houses an important collection of drawings, watercolors, and prints by early Texas artist Bror Utter (1913 — 1993), including Utter's 1957 - 58 studies of vanishing Fort Worth architecture.
The museum also maintains extensive collections of art from Africa, South Asia, China, and the Americas.
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