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  1. What’s Blooming at Bayou Bend? Magnolias!

    May 1, 2015 - In the Butterfly Garden, when the azaleas’ blooms fade away, the Sweetbay Magnolias (Magnolia virginiana) reveal their blooms. Southern Magnolia No matter when you visit Bayou Bend from spring through early summer, you’ll see magnolias blooming!   Dazzling azaleas and camellias may take center stage during early spring, but framing the splendor are the magnificent magnolias, which bloom well into the summer months, when few other flowers can be found.

  2. The Mellon Undergraduate Curatorial Fellowship Program

    When will the program resume?We anticipate that the MUCF program will resume in late 2023 or early 2024. Is the MUCF program paused at all partner museums? How can I be notified when the MUCF program resumes?Sign up for email updates by sending a request to interns@mfah.org or by checking this web page in the fall of 2023. When the program resumes, following evaluation and assessment, application guidelines will be posted here. Why is the MUCF program pausing?The MUCF will pause briefly to conduct a thorough evaluation.

  3. Lost & Found: The Iconic Royal Painting That Rose Again

    Oct 19, 2018 - The painting remained missing until 1973, when a Tate Gallery curator was going through damaged carpets and found the rolled-up canvas of the Delaroche painting. When the restored painting returned to gallery walls, it was immediately a sensation again and one of the most popular works of art among National Portrait Gallery visitors. French painter Paul Delaroche interpreted the drama of this story by depicting the moment just before Jane’s death in the 1833 painting The Execution of Lady Jane Grey, which was quite a sensation when it was exhibited in the

  4. Journey through the Egyptian Afterlife with Matthew Barney’s “River of Fundament”

    Sep 1, 2016 - And—as with opera—when your eyes feel overloaded, you can close them and let yourself be transported by the sound. I visited Barney’s studio when he first arrived in New York City, while I was running the legendary alternative space White Columns. Even when Barney’s work was still primitive-looking, his desires to engage gigantic themes were present. His early performance-based videos remain unforgettable.

  5. The Kodak Snapshot: A Conversation with MFAH Curator Anne Tucker (part 2 of 3)

    Apr 3, 2012 - But this unique period—when these charming, small objects filtered out into the public—was rich." He told me he noticed that when people came back from a trip and had two pictures left they wouldn’t waste those two pictures. "When I was in graduate school in the 1960s, there was a man that worked at Kodak [whose job it] was to feed the film into the machine that processed it and made the prints.

  6. A Conservation Challenge: The Ceramic Robotics of Clayton Bailey

    Feb 19, 2014 - When enough air builds up, the head lifts up in the water and releases the air with a burp. When the water level was higher, the burp was louder and longer, and the intervals between burps longer. When the object came into the Museum’s collection, it had been separated from its original pump, and where the water level should be was unclear.

  7. For Slow Art Day, Cai Guo-Qiang’s “Odyssey”

    Apr 1, 2020 - Saturday, April 4, is the 10th annual worldwide Slow Art Day, when all of us are encouraged to spend real time with a work of art: at least 5 to 10 minutes—more than the 30 seconds studies have shown is our average when we encounter

  8. Carpet Connoisseurship: How to Look Closely at the “Wagner Garden Carpet”

    Oct 29, 2018 - Borders We’re used to seeing carpets when they are lying horizontally on the ground, but they actually have a top and bottom because of the way the looms are set up when carpets are woven.   At the top, the weavers were in the middle of weaving trees, flowers, and animals when they realized that the carpet had reached the appropriate length. Here are some things to keep an eye out for when you see it!   Design The carpet’s design is all about movement. Branches sway in the wind, water flows, animals fly and leap.

  9. Her Starfish Will Lure You In

    Nov 26, 2014 - When we use our eyes to look at her installation Woven Water: Submarine Landscape, we may not even notice the starfish at first. The Colombia native now lives in Australia, and she first became fascinated by what she calls the "seductive" qualities of starfish when she was in San Francisco. You may not see eyes when you look at them, but starfish are animals, just as humans are. “I realized that starfish have five limbs,” she says, “and we have five fingers, and I thought, oh my!”

  10. Welcome to the MFAH

    Children 12 and younger are always admitted free, and on weekends ages 18 and younger receive free admission when they show their card from any Texas public library. When you plan your visits, check the ever-changing calendar of events for activities throughout the Museum, including the Glassell School of Art and our two house museums: Bayou Bend Collection and Gardens and Rienzi. Please visit often, and say hello when you see me in the galleries.Sincerely, Gary TinterowDirectorThe Margaret Alkek Williams ChairThe Museum of Fine Arts, Houston A Conversation with Gary TinterowWatch a series of conversations