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Showing results for ? https://viagrasilo.top 부족한 성욕을 불러일으키는 ‘여성 비아그라’ 등장 전후의 성 문화 변화

  1. Line: Making the Mark

    Artists may press pencil directly to paper or brush ink right onto a surface; or they may create their work indirectly, through the printmaking process—first drawing on stone, carving into wood, or etching into metal, and then

  2. Treasures from Korea: Arts and Culture of the Joseon Dynasty, 1392–1910

    ., and Sung Ha Choi; Jin S. Park, M.D., and Yang O. Huh, M.D.; Nancy C. Allen; Baytown Shopping Center; Michelle H. Chong; Sue and Randy Sim; Tokyo Gardens Catering, LLC;  and Friends of "Treasures from Korea." This sweeping panorama celebrates the artistic achievements of the Joseon dynasty, a line of 27 monarchs who ruled the Korean peninsula for more than 500 years and left a substantial legacy for modern Korea. This exhibition is made possible by the National Endowment for the Humanities, the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation, and the Korea Foundation. Transportation assistance is provided by Korean Air.

  3. Monet and the Seine: Impressions of a River

    I have painted the Seine throughout my life, at every hour, at every season. I have never tired of it: for me the Seine is always new.” The canvases provide an intimate look at the Seine, a subject essential to Monet’s identity as an artist. The celebrated river captivated Monet more than any other theme, inspiring a vast number of paintings and surpassing even his defining series of water lilies by more than 100 works.

  4. Jennifer Steinkamp: Mike Kelley Projections

    The series, titled Mike Kelley, now comprises 17 projections, each a variant on a single tree that passes through the four seasons: going from bare, to tender green, to autumnal incandescence, and back to the barren boughs of At the same time, the boughs gyrate in a sinuous ballet, implying the larger earth cycles of wind, storm, and change. Mike Kelley, 14 entered the collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, in 2011.

  5. Fangs, Feathers, and Fins: Sacred Creatures in Ancient American Art

    The inventive ways in which animals were depicted in art provide a window into the beliefs and practices of long-gone cultures that never developed written language and left few traces other than their art. Among the works on view are evocative ceramic vessels and stone monuments made by the Maya and Olmec of ancient Mexico, a feather tunic from the Nasca people of Peru, and intricate gold ornaments from the Tairona culture of Colombia

  6. Shadows on the Wall: Cameraless Photography from 1851 to Today

    Made for science or for art, the photographs on view vary in size from a few inches to 25 feet. Drawn from the permanent collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Shadows on the Wall: Cameraless Photography from 1851 to Today presents 50 evocative images created with light and chemistry but without the use of a The images reflect a range of techniques as visually diverse as the movements of art to which they belong—recording the precise outlines of botanical specimens, the alchemy of the darkroom, or the abstraction of form.

  7. Silver: An American Art—Selections from the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    Private collections, including those of Milo M.

  8. Houghton Hall: Portrait of an English Country House

    Among the highlights are great family portraits by William Hogarth, Joshua Reynolds, and John Singer Sargent; several dozen pieces of Sèvres porcelain; rare R. J. & S. Luther King Capital Management KONGSBERG The Vivian L. Smith Foundation The Cyvia and Melvyn Wolff Endowment for Exhibitions Dale Family Foundation / Michael W. Dale

  9. Charles Marville: Photographer of Paris

    Generous funding is provided by Joseph M. Cohen and The Hite Foundation. One of photography’s early masters, Marville has long been a mystery, partly because documents that would shed light on his biography were thought to have disappeared in a fire that consumed Paris’s city hall in 1871. Many of Marville’s photographs depict Paris at the very moment of its transformation from a city of narrow streets and medieval buildings into the most modern of European capitals.

  10. Alexander Archipenko: The Berlin Drawings

    One of the most influential sculptors of the 20th century, Kiev-born artist Alexander Archipenko (1887–1964) played a central role in the emergence of Modernism. Although Archipenko was known primarily for his sculpture, he also executed a number of drawings, an extraordinary group of which forms the centerpiece of this exhibition.