The “National Museum of Wildlife Art of the United States” displays paintings, sculpture, and works on paper by more than 550 artists, ranging from early American Tribes through contemporary masters. […]
Tag: Art Museum
The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art
Recognized worldwide as one of America’s finest art museums, the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art is an architectural marvel with a world-class collection of art. […]
100 Plaster Casts + 125 Years = 42,000 Art Objects
One of the oldest art museums in the United States and the oldest in the Pacific Northwest, the Portland Art Museum in Portland, Oregon stewards a collection of some 42,000 objects, reflecting the history of art from ancient times to today. […]
Discovering the Princeton University Art Museum
The exceptional Princeton University Art Museum collections number more than 100,000 objects, ranging from ancient to contemporary art. With only three to five percent of the holdings on display at any one time, an active curatorial rotation program continually refreshes the permanent collection galleries and maintains a schedule of special temporary exhibitions. […]
Fairfield University Art Museum
This delightful small museum located in an English-style manorhouse stewards a rich and varied collection of paintings, sculpture, decorative art objects and works on paper. […]
Another World in Tucson: DeGrazia Gallery in the Sun
Wander through another world at the Degrazia Gallery in the Sun. Handmade adobe buildings, a riotous garden, inventive decorative touches — the compound — and his art – exude creative energy. […]
Discovering the Tucson Desert Art Museum
A young museum with an exceptional collection of Navajo and Hopi pre-1940s textiles; classic and contemporary Southwestern paintings, including works highly-regarded artists of the Southwest; and an active special exhibitions program. […]
Discovering the Maynard Dixon Museum, Tucson AZ
Tucked in a back corner the extraordinary Medicine Man Gallery — the Maynard Dixon Museum is small. But the overall experience is large — as was Maynard Dixon’s own mark on the world. […]