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  1. Celebrating “Olga de Amaral” with a Virtual Visit to a Tapestry Loom

    For this unique program, the MFAH and Contemporary Handweavers of Houston use Zoom to visit a working tapestry loom.

  2. Black Art & Abstraction: “Soul of a Nation” Virtual Panel Discussion

    Jul 26, 2020 - His work belongs to the collections of 35 museums and has been exhibited in more than 200 venues around the world. William T. Williams American painter William T. Plan ahead for your visit. This virtual lecture series receives generous funding from Humanities Texas, the state affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

  3. Houghton Hall: Portrait of an English Country House

    Learn More Visit houghtonhall.com to explore Houghton Hall's fascinating history and magnificent collection. Houghton Hall: Portrait of an English Country House assembles nearly 200 objects in settings that combine paintings, porcelain, sculpture, costume, metalwork, and furniture to evoke the stunning rooms at Houghton Hall.

  4. Give to the MFAH

    To learn more about ways to support the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, visit our Annual Fund Drives page. Quick Donate Annual Fund Drives Join Leadership Circle

  5. hang@MFAH: A Place for Teens

    Jun 27, 2013 - For more information on hang@MFAH, visit the program page here. By building on our existing strengths and fully using the tools of our connected age—just as generations before us harnessed the advances of their times—we can help create the makers and life-long learners that our era demands Our learning lab is equipped with digital-media tools such as 3-D printers and iPads, as well as analog tools such as sewing machines and fabric. Working with mentor artists, teens are limited only by their own imaginations.

  6. Rienzi Society

    (FMV for an individual membership is $100 and $200 for a couple.) For more information, contact RienziSociety@mfah.org or 713.639.7523. Parking in the Museum’s garages is complimentary during Patron Group events!

  7. Strike a Pose and Find Inspiration with #InstaTourMFAH

    Apr 13, 2017 - Photo by @tmnewtn  Photo by @ruthiechen  Photo by @galaorwhatever Smartphones Rule Snapping pictures during their visit continues to be an important way visitors engage with art. In a survey, we learned that 96% of MFAH visitors had smartphones during their visit, and 78% of them used these devices to take photos while they were here. What Stops You in Your Tracks? Rather than focusing on art-history information or biographies of artists, our guide examines why these objects are so intriguing to photograph.

  8. Reinstallation of MFAH Galleries for European Art

    Jun 6, 2022 - “Following on the reinstallation of our American galleries, in 2020, we have similarly rethought the display of our European collections to more fully express the history, culture, and faith in which these works were originally “This new, interdisciplinary presentation furthers a new approach to our collections,” commented MFAH director Gary Tinterow. The 11 galleries feature some 200 objects, organized across nine groupings: The Medieval Era; Late Medieval and Early Renaissance Art; 16th-Century Roman Art; 16th-Century Netherlandish and German Art; Renaissance Portraits; Art

  9. Slowing Down at the MFAH: Celebrate Slow Art Day!

    Apr 5, 2018 - Think back to your last visit to an art museum. How did you tackle the space? Was your goal to hit every single gallery, or did you focus your visit by choosing to see just one or two exhibitions? Most people view a work of art for only 6 to 10 seconds—which is not surprising given our culture of distraction and constant visual stimuli. Slow Art Day is an opportunity to combat that fast rhythm we’ve come to associate with TV and swiping on our smartphones, allowing ourselves the time to make new discoveries.

  10. Spotlight Tour at Rienzi “Globalization”

    In November, discover how the exchange of ideas and materials had a profound impact on objects made 200 to 300 years ago. • Rienzi is the MFAH house museum for European decorative arts.