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15 result(s) for "Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.) Exhibitions."
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Response to Responses on “What We Talk About When We Talk About Provenance”
I am honored by the care that Drs Gill, Bell, and Lyons have taken in reading and responding to my article \"What We Talk About When We Talk About Provenance.\" I am also grateful to Alexander Bauer, the editor of this journal, for the idea of inviting them to comment upon it. Many of their observations have made me want to go back and revise the original text, but I will instead acknowledge and reflect here upon those places where they have prompted me either to clarify my arguments or to change my mind. Later in this article, I will use the recent exhibition, 'Pergamon and the Hellenistic Kingdoms of the Ancient World', which was on view at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (MMA) in the spring and summer of 2016, as a fresh source of evidence and examples.
Michelangelo and the Sistine Chapel open at the Met
Take a 360 tour with Carmen C. Bambach, who curated \"Michelangelo: Divine Draftsman and Designer\" at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Emoji on Display in NY Museum of Modern Art
\"Emoji are going to MoMa. The pictographs now so familiar to users of portable phones and tablets will be on display at New York's Museum of Modern Art from December, in a permanent exhibit on graphics and animation.\" (Social Studies for Kids) Read more about emoji.
Look Who's Smiley Now: MoMA Acquires Original Emoji
\"Your phone has just become home to a tiny little collection of modern art. On Wednesday, the Museum of Modern Art announced that it had acquired the original set of 176 emoji for its permanent collection.\" (New York Times (Online)) Learn more about the original emoji and their place in the Museum of Modern Art.
Metropolitan Museum of Art Hosts New Winslow Homer Exhibit
\"In April [2022], the Metropolitan Museum of Art, or Met, in New York, opened a new exhibit featuring the work of American artist Winslow Homer. Winslow Homer lived between 1836 and 1910. Today, he is considered one of the most important American artists of the 19th century.\" (NewsCurrents Read to Know) Read more about this Winslow Homer art exhibit.
Lebanon
On October 17, Lebanese of all backgrounds took to the streets calling for the fall of the government, an end to corruption, the removal of the entire political class, and the end of sectarianism. The protests were initially triggered by a raft of new proposed taxes, including on WhatsApp calls, aimed at servicing the third-highest debt-to-GDP ratio in the world.
Reflections
A year has passed since I moved from Japan to New York to take up the position of Director at Japan Society Gallery. Who would have thought that in that time, the United States would transition to a new administration that has called for the construction of a wall along its border? Strangely enough, the last time I was in New York - as Associate and Adjunct Curator at the New Museum from 2003 to 2006 - was when George W. Bush was reelected. This second stint in New York has afforded me, once again, the opportunity to distance myself from Asia and think about it from afar, and it arrives as institutions in the US are considering diversity in art from a more global perspective, and from intellectual and economic standpoints. Ironically, this seems to be happening in part as a response to signs that societies around the world are beginning to align themselves to the forces of conservatism. Perhaps this is a time to think again about how imagination and expression, in collusion with art, have and continue to struggle against conventional thinking.
Emoji at MoMA
\"Every year, many people visit the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Starting next month, these visitors will be able to learn more about the symbols known as Emoji. Emoji are changing our world every day.\" (NewsCurrents Read to Know) Read more about emoji.