Baroque 1620 – 1800: Style in the Age of Magnificence
Baroque 1620 – 1800: Style in the Age of Magnificence 4 April – 19 July 2009 Victoria and Albert Museum
Baroque 1620 – 1800: Style in the Age of Magnificence 4 April – 19 July 2009 Victoria and Albert Museum
UM Lowe Art Museum peers through the lens in showcasing two photography exhibits works from the permanent collection, Newman to delight viewers June 27 – October 4, 2009
The Asheville Art Museum Screens The Gates at the Fine Arts Theatre Thursday, February 19, 2009 at 7:00 p.m.
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth presents FOCUS: Jeff Elrod, February 15—March 29, 2009
Art After Hours, the popular social gathering designed to build community around art will be relocated to the MMA La Mirada galleries at 720 Via Mirada in Monterey for the months of January, February and March.
From daydreams to nightmares, images and stories fill our heads helping us to solve problems, explore fantasies and unlock hidden feelings. In a lucid dream, the dreamer can consciously control characters and settings. Lucid Dreaming, the second exhibition in the vibrant news series Shift: Investigations in Contemporary Art at the James A. Michener Art Museum […]
Chalo! India: A New Era of Indian Art, bringing together 27 artists / artist groups from cities throughout India. 22 November (Sat), 2008 – 15 March (sun), 2009 MORI ART MUSEUM
Exhibition Picasso on Paper Highlights Museum’s Permanent Collection September 6, 2008 – February 22, 2009
Yinka Shonibare, MBE: A Flying Machine for Every Man, Woman and Child and Other Astonishing Works First Solo Exhibition in the Western U.S. opens at SBMA March 14 – June 21, 2009
Fifty/50 at MMA La Mirada opens March 14 Made in Monterey opens at Pacific Street April 18
Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth presents FOCUS: Ranjani Shettar, December 14, 2008–February 8, 2009
Ranjani Shettar creates large-scale, abstract sculpture by combining manmade and natural materials such as wood, beeswax, cloth, thread, rubber, PVC pipe, wire, steel, and beads. Her works, which appear to be as impulsive and random as they are patterned and logical, are frequently arranged as sculptural installations that interact with and articulate the space around them.
The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth opened its new building, designed by the renowned Japanese architect Tadao Ando, to the public on December 14, 2002.
The new Modern is located in Fort Worth’s celebrated Cultural District, directly opposite the Kimbell Art Museum, designed by Louis I. Kahn, and near the Amon Carter Museum, designed by Philip Johnson. To date, the Museum is Mr. Ando’s largest project completed outside of Japan. It comprises five long, flat-roofed pavilions situated on a two-acre reflecting pond.