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Showing results for 사파동가개통ꉩ 【ㅋr톡TKUP3】【업티켓】 skillpain ″its 사파동가개통ᗺ

  1. “Two Centuries of American Still-Life Painting: The Frank and Michelle Hevrdejs Collection” Opens at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, in January

    Dec 16, 2016 - Moving into the 20th century, works such as Max Weber’s Still Life with Three Jugs (1929) and Georgia O’Keeffe’s From Pink Shell (1931) reflect the growth of Modernism in America and its influence on the still-life genre. Following its inaugural display in Houston, Two Centuries of American Still-Life Painting will travel to the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art (April 22–July 30, 2017) and the Tacoma Museum of Art (September 2, 2017–January 7, 2018 Gerdts, the Hevrdejs collection of still-life paintings is “unique in that it is devoted to the entire expanse of the still-life genre, from its beginnings shortly after the establishment of American independence to works of art

  2. “Koloman Moser: Designing Modern Vienna, 1897–1907” Opens at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, in September

    Jul 15, 2013 - Scholarly publications, as well as lectures, films and other educational programs accompany its exhibitions. Moser’s sensitive handling of color, texture and light are apparent in its execution. Glass was another particular medium in which Moser excelled. jewelry, silverwork and was also an innovative graphic artist First-ever American retrospective is co-organized with the Neue Galerie New York Houston—July 2013—This September, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, launches its

  3. The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Revisits Revolutionary Italian Design through the Landmark Collection of Dennis Freedman

    Sep 18, 2019 - Dennis Freedman has collected rare pieces that provide an in-depth view into the period, its design, and its key figures; he is one of very few collectors to focus on Radical Italian design in the United States.” Collectives Archizoom Associati, Superstudio, UFO, and architect Gianni Pettena, among others, ignited the Radical design movement in the city by developing its visual language and philosophy. Studio65, on the other hand, employed Pop Art-inflected iconography in its Capitello (1971) chair—a large scale classical Greek column that was a direct critique of high culture and class divisions.

  4. Christian Marclay “Telephones”

    Ultimately it is the telephone itself, through all its incarnations from rotary-dial to push-button, that plays the starring role. This exhibition is organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

  5. Line: Making the Mark

    With the advent of Modernism in the 20th century, line became its own definitive subject for artists, who no longer used it merely for representational purposes.

  6. Europe 1900–1975: Selections from the Museum’s Collection

    Works on display range from early portraits by Robert Delaunay and Henri Matisse; to signature paintings and works on paper by Pablo Picasso that define Cubism and its legacy; to forays into Surrealism by Max Ernst, Joan Miró,

  7. Beyond Craft: Decorative Arts from the Leatrice S. and Melvin B. Eagle Collection

    Eagle Collection is one of the most remarkable collections of its type. Based in Potomac, Maryland, Lee and Mel Eagle have been collecting decorative arts since the 1960s, and the MFAH acquired their collection in 2010.

  8. Eye on Third Ward: Jack Yates High School Photography

    Now in its 16th year, Eye on Third Ward continues to inspire museum visitors along with the participants.

  9. Infinite Pause: Photography and Time at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    May 18, 2016 - The second section highlights works in which the camera has frozen time in an instantaneous flash or traced its sequential unfolding. time’s relationship with photography Title Infinite Pause: Photography and Time Dates June 18–September 5, 2016 Overview This exhibition explores photography’s ability to both stop time in an instant and to capture its

  10. Community Artists’ Collective

    Jun 13, 2020 - A reflection on family history, slavery, and complicity by one of the Glassell School of Art’s own, Nell Gottlieb, is now in its final week at Community Artists’ Collective (CAC). In addition to exhibitions, CAC focuses its efforts on youth and adult arts education, entrepreneurship, and community development. Learn more about the artist and the exhibition.