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Claude Monet
The Artist's Garden at Giverny, c.1900 - to get a bigger size photo of this print and also review the newest updates relating to this Claude Monet fine artwork, click through on the artist caption slightly the reduced picture. Get buying, framing and height and width hints for this gallery giclee print. Claude Monet has made a large amount of other museum art posters in a similar style as "The Artist's Garden at Giverny, c.1900", look into the artist store for new museum giclee prints. Steve Thoms
Down the Lane - to check out a bigger image and glance at added details relative to this Steve Thoms gallery art picture, move on through the artists name connected with the miniature image at your left. Additionally find out about purchasing, conservation framing methods and width and height advice for this wall giclee print. Steve Thoms is one of the top 50 best selling artists and has a large amount of other artist posters similar in characteristics to "Down the Lane", Find their other art print images . 008 Set in Stone: The Face in Medieval Sculpture Museum Director Philippe de Montebello provides the historical context behind these medieval sculpted heads, recalling their importance as icons and symbols of power. Empowerment in a Bad Art History Job Market
Fellow Art History fans, the US economic "collapse" comes as no shock to most of us. And when I speak of "us," it's not in reference to art buyers of... Calder Jewelry July 12, 2008 - November 2, 2008: This exhibition focuses on the jewelry of artist Alexander Calder (1898–1976), which functions as sculpture on a small scale while retaining the linear yet three-dimensional aspect of the monumental mobiles for which he is known. Refinishing (Tue, Oct 14)
Worcester Center for Crafts, Refinishing Studio, 25 Sagamore Road, Worcester, MA
Tuesdays from 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
9/9/2008 - 11/11/2008, 10 Classes
Tuesdays from 12:00 PM - 3:00 PM
9/9/2008 - 11/11/2008, 10 Classes
Wednesdays from 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
9/10/2008 - 11/12/2008, 10 Classes
Wednesdays from 12:00 PM - 3:00 PM
9/10/2008 - 11/12/2008, 10 Classes
Thursdays from 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
9/11/2008 - 11/13/2008, 10 Classes
Thursdays from 12:00 PM - 3:00 PM
9/11/2008 - 11/13/2008, 10 Classes
This course teaches basic techniques used in refinishing and restoring furniture of all periods. The materials fee covers the cost of remover, alcohol, lacquer thinner, mineral spirits, rubbing oil, turpentine, linseed oil, transparent finish (varnish, sanding sealer, and shellac), steel wool, sand paper, brushes, and adhesives. Students should expect to purchase some additional supplies. Repairs and/or reconstruction of missing parts will be done outside of class. Both the size and type of piece must be approved by the instructor prior to the beginning of class. All pieces must be taken home at the end of the session. Some materials included.
WOO Benefits at the Craft Center!
10% off all craft classes and workshops (which you can take for credit)!
10% discount off purchases over $15 in the Gallery Store!
FREE entrance to Annual Festival of Crafts, Thanksgiving weekend!
FREE entrance to all major events!
Cost: Tuition and Fees: Non-Member Fee $339.00 / Member Fee $299.00 / Materials Fee $40.00
Tuesdays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, through Nov 13.
A City and a Newspaper: Citizen Journalism in Philadelphia during the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793 (Tue, Oct 14) 7:30 PM-9:00 PM,
American Antiquarian Society, 185 Salisbury Street, Worcester, MA
What is a newspaper for? In 1793, desperate Philadelphians turned to a single newspaper, the Federal Gazette, the only paper in the city to keep publishing during a devastating yellow fever outbreak. What did they want from their newspaper, and what did it actually provide? The readers of the Federal Gazette had dramatically different ideas about what a newspaper should be and what it should do during an urban crisis. In this lecture David Paul Nord will describe how citizensboth elites and ordinary peopleused the press in Philadelphia in 1793. In the process, he will also discuss the broader subject of the civic function of newspapers in American citiesin history and today.
Sponsored by: American Antiquarian Society. Cost: Free
Through Sunday, Jan 1.
Imagining Cathay: 18th- and Early 19th-Century Chinoiserie Textiles and Embroideries from the Collection December 8, 2007 - Fall 2008: For Europeans during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, China—or Cathay as it was sometimes called—was a magical place. This exhibition includes nine Chinoiserie textiles and embroideries from the Museum's outstanding collection. |