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Natasha Wescoat
With the Waves - to view a larger depiction of this print plus peruse other research concerning this Natasha Wescoat artist giclee print, click through on the artists caption affixed to the little depiction. Obtain purchasing, framing and width and height facts for this gallery art poster print. Natasha Wescoat has made many other artists giclees in the same style as "With the Waves", examine the artists catalogue for the newest museum art reproductions. Historical Combat Demonstrations (Sat, May 17) 1:00 PM-1:30 PM, 3:00 PM-3:30 PM,
Higgins Armory Museum, 100 Barber Avenue, Worcester, MA
German Longsword and the Medieval Master-at-Arms: Have at you! Witness the subtle skills of attack, parry, and grapple, as the Higgins Armory Sword Guild brings to life the knightly arts of the sword and buckler, dagger, longsword, and halberd, revived from the long-lost words of medieval masters, as the Sword Guild recreates a medieval combat school.
Cost: Free with Museum Admission
Through Sunday, Jan 1.
Art in Review ?Subtraction? at Deitch Projects, Peter Coffin at Andrew Kreps Gallery, David Claerbout at Yvon Lambert Gallery and more.
Falsettos (Sat, May 17) 3:00 PM-5:00 PM, 8:00 PM-10:00 PM,
Foothills Theatre Company, 100 Front Street, Worcester, MA
Its about husbands. Its about wives. Its about children. Its about lovers. Its about family. Its about life. Join us as we present this Tony Award Wining Musical and Foothills Theatres final production of the 2007-2008 season!
Sponsored by: WCRN, Pulse. Cost: $35 for Thursday Shows; $38 for all other days; $19 Student Discount; WOO Card $15; AAA- $3 off; WGBH $5 off; AARP $3 off
Saturdays, through Jun 1.
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.
Wasted Youth
A collaboration between two superhot artists
instantly looks dated.
Šolman’s "The Heart of Perspective, The Making of the Film" Concludes April 5th at UCCS Dario Šolman’s The Heart of Perspective, The Making of the Film is an ongoing project begun in 2001 that consists of studies and tests for a film that will never be made. Šolman has stated, “When we use the word ‘film,’ we think of a possible film, a hypothetic interplay of image, sound and text. To avoid further confusion, we should think of it as film without a film. In other words, a film space that is not contained in a film shell.” Instead, Šolman uses the terms Cinemation or Secondary-Cinema to refer to his practice. He allows the evidences of the film - the tests, the texts, and the research - to define what this non-existent film is or can be. 019 Impressed by Light: British Photographs from Paper Negatives, 1840?1860 Guest curator Roger Taylor traces the history and impact of the paper negative, or calotype, which was invented by Henry Talbot in 1841. |