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

  1. Life & Luxury: The Art of Living in Eighteenth-Century Paris

    Experience the elegance of a typical day in a Paris town house during the 1700s. The activity of collecting—particularly art—is explored in a section that evokes a private Parisian galerie. This sumptuous exhibition offers a glimpse into the conventional activities in the cycle of a single day: dressing, writing, collecting, eating, and evening entertainment.

  2. English Taste: The Art of Dining in the Eighteenth Century

    The 18th-century English dinner table was a feast for the eyes. The first special exhibition ever held at Rienzi, the MFAH house museum for European decorative arts, English Taste treats you to a dining-room extravaganza typical of a 1760s English country house. Raffald’s illustration “Directions for a Grand Table” from 1769 serves as the design template for the installation. This exhibition is organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

  3. Acid on Metal: The Art of Etching and Aquatint

    the biting of a metal plate with acid to incise a design.  Goya, who created works of a sharp satirical and political nature, showcases his mastery of aquatint with The Cid Campeador Attacking a Bull with His Lance. Generous funding is provided by:   Additional support is provided by: International Fine Print Dealers Association  Harry S. and Isabel C. Cameron Foundation  

  4. The Spirit of Modernism: The John R. Eckel, Jr. Foundation Gift to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    Accompanying the exhibition is a book, available at MFAH Shop, featuring essays and highlights of the works. Additionally, the MFAH Archives has acquired the Edward J Wormley Collection, a gift of the John R. Eckel, Jr. His art collection, now known as the John R. Eckel, Jr. The Spirit of Modernism pays tribute to the entrepreneurial spirit of businessman and art collector John R. Eckel, Jr.

  5. Second Nature: Contemporary Landscapes from the MFAH Collection

    Encompassing all media, this exhibition illustrates landscape imagery mediated through natural selection, imagination, and technology, offering a second look at the natural world.

  6. Helmut Newton: White Women • Sleepless Nights • Big Nudes

    The prints on view in Helmut Newton: White Women • Sleepless Nights • Big Nudes were made specifically for the exhibition and are large-scale—some reaching nearly 8 x 8 feet. A complete set of the prints in the exhibition has been acquired by the MFAH. Newton (1920–2004) survived Nazi Germany as a self-supporting, nomadic teenager to emerge a world-renowned photographer. The 205 photographs in these books established Newton´s reputation as the supreme recorder of female identity, and as a master craftsman of the photographic medium.

  7. Beauty, Humor, and Social Justice: Gifts from Joan Morgenstern

    An Evening with Joan MorgensternWednesday, July 20, 6 p.m.In conjunction with this exhibition, Joan Morgenstern talks about her collection and answers questions at Houston Center for Photography. A short reception follows. Houstonian Joan Morgenstern began to collect photography in 1985, while enrolled in a photo history class at the Glassell School of Art. Julie Blackmon, Bill Brandt, Keith Carter, Robert Frank, Earlie Hudnall, Ray K. Metzker, Richard Misrach, and Simon Norfolk are among the photographers whose work is on view in the exhibition.

  8. Titian and the Golden Age of Venetian Painting: Masterpieces from the National Galleries of Scotland

    Ann G. Trammell   Exhibition Catalogue A comprehensive, illustrated catalogue, published by the MFAH and distributed by Yale University Press, commemorates this landmark presentation. Titian and the Golden Age of Venetian Painting presents 25 masterworks of the Venetian Renaissance—12 paintings and 13 drawings—that include two of the greatest paintings of the Italian Renaissance: Titian´s Diana and Actaeon

  9. Simpson Kalisher: The Alienated Photographer

    Kalisher’s pictures document everyday scenes primarily from the 1950s and 1960s in a profound—yet straightforward—fashion. In 2009, the MFAH acquired 100 black-and-white photographs by American street photographer Simpson Kalisher (born 1926), given by Gloria Richards, a longtime supporter of the artist’s work. [because] they seem to represent the culmination of a thousand thoughts that were in the air.” The Alienated Photographer is available in the MFAH Shop. This exhibition is organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

  10. CHARLES LEDRAY: workworkworkworkwork

    Writing for the Boston Globe, Sebastian Smee extolled: “LeDray has a poet’s ability to concentrate and lift the imagination. The extraordinary ceramic display Throwing Shadows (2008–10) includes more than 3,000 unique small black porcelain pots, each less than 2 inches tall. In an era of high-tech production, LeDray remains committed to a painstaking manual process, creating intimate sculptures and installations that mine the memories of childhood and the ways in which people choose to construct their