Check Back Tomorrow for More Art News and Prints
* Important: Allow Pop-ups to View Listings *
Ken Bailey
Three Lab Bakery - to glance at a larger picture and obtain extra history concerning this Ken Bailey museum art artworks, mouse click the artists caption a bit above the thumbnail. In addition there is purchasing, conservation framing methods and proportion info for this wall giclee. Ken Bailey has many more acclaimed gallerie images in addition to "Three Lab Bakery", take a look at the artists inventory for new museum art prints. Well: Pain as an Art Form From Frida Kahlo to the Pain Exhibit, artists paint, draw and sculpt to express their pain.
Sophie Harding
Nellie the Elephant - to get a bigger picture as well as attain enhanced content in reference to this Sophie Harding art print picture, mouse click the artist name affixed to the small display at your left. In addition there is buying, conservation framing methods and proportion consumer guidance for this gallerie poster. Sophie Harding is a known artist and has made different gallery posters similar to "Nellie the Elephant", look at their other gallery poster prints. Art Review: When Artworks Collide ?Who?s Afraid of Jasper Johns?,? a group show at the Tony Shafrazi Gallery in Chelsea, is the latest proof that you don?t have to be a museum to shake things up.
016 Poiret: King of Fashion Curator Harold Koda explains Paul Poiret's significant contributions to the world of fashion. The video version includes a special animation feature. Whitney Biennial 2008 Opens Today
Museum honors stylish superheroes A cadre of superheroes has invaded one of Gotham's top cultural institutions, bringing swaths of bright color, pop graphics and an everyman theme to the hallowed halls of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Have no fear, though. Their mission is friendly....

 From Anvil to Microscope: Modern metallography and the ancient secrets of metalcraft (Sat, May 17)
Higgins Armory Museum, 100 Barber Avenue, Worcester, MA
Metallurgy has been among the most influential human technologies for over five thousand years. Preindustrial metalsmiths knew nothing of the material science that governs the properties of metals, yet their traditional techniques, handed down from generation to generation, allowed them to manipulate these properties to produce superior steels even without any scientific understanding of what they were doing. This exhibit uses the tools of modern metallography such as optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and electron diffusion analysis to reveal the composition and structure of a selection of artifacts from the Higgins Armory collection, ranging from a Chinese bronze blade of 1000 B.C.E. to a modern decorative sword, tracing the evolution of metals technology across the millennia.
Cost: Free with Museum Admission
Through Wednesday, Oct 15.
Live Cinema/Carlos Amorales: Four Animations, Five Drawings, and a Plague April 11, 2008 - July 13, 2008: Over the last decade, Carlos Amorales has developed a unique visual vocabulary that he has used and reused, both alone and in collaboration with other artists, in mediums ranging from drawing and animation to installation and performance. |