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Category Archives: Museums
A New Home for Readers and Writers
The Center for Fiction, which describes itself as “the only organization in the U.S. solely devoted to the creation and enjoyment of fiction,” has announced that its new home will open in Brooklyn, N.Y. in January 2019. The three-story complex, … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Books, Libraries, Museums, Tourism, USA, Writing
Tagged Brooklyn, Fiction, New York City, NYC
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Why Museums Matter
Anyone who has ever traveled with me can attest to my museum obsession. I have been accused of being incapable of passing any museum without popping in for a visit. Of course these types of consuming passions all have an origin or … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, History, Museums, Tourism, USA
Tagged Brooklyn Museum, Musée du Louvre, National Gallery
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Bowie In Brooklyn
Tomorrow the critically acclaimed traveling exhibition David Bowie is will open at the Brooklyn Museum in New York City. The retrospective on the late artist’s five-decade career began at London’s Victoria and Albert Museum in August 2013 and has been touring ever … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Film, Museums, Music, Photography, Tourism, USA
Tagged Brooklyn Museum, David Bowie, New York, NYC
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We Miss Them So Much
Earlier this month, the Smithsonian Museum of American Art and National Portrait Gallery unveiled the official portraits of former President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama. I wasn’t much impressed by the images of the paintings that I saw … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Museums, USA
Tagged National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C
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Too Much Future
Too Much Future is a new work of public art from the Whitney Museum’s #Public Art series. Each piece is installed on the facade of a building across the street from the New York City institution and can also be viewed from the … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Museums, Tourism, USA
Tagged High Line, New York City, NYC, Street Art, Whitney Museum
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Literary Illustration
There is a long history of utilizing maps as a mode of literary illustration. The current exhibition Landmarks: Maps As Literary Illustration at Harvard’s Houghton Library in Cambridge, Massachusetts brings together a wonderful collection of more than sixty literary maps of places … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, Libraries, Maps, Museums, USA, Writing
Tagged 100 Acre Wood, book illustration, Cartography, Don Quixote, mapmaking, Miguel de Cervantes, Oz, Winnie the Pooh
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Mind The Gap
The Château la Coste is a renowned vineyard located near Aix-en-Provence in the south of France. Along with fine wines, the vineyard is also known for its art. The Renzo Piano-designed gallery is currently hosting an installation from everyone’s favorite … Continue reading
It’s The Thought That Counts
What’s a writer with limited financial resources to do when the holidays roll around and he wants to send gifts? For Langston Hughes, during the holiday season of 1950, the answer was to share some of his wit in homemade … Continue reading
Posted in Books, Libraries, Museums, USA, Writing
Tagged Christmas, Langston Hughes, Poetry, Yale Beinecke Library
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The Matter of Jerusalem
During the last few days, Jerusalem has once again been at the top of the world news. The clever short film below, which was inspired by a new exhibition on medieval manuscripts at Oxford’s Bodleian Library, reminds us that the … Continue reading
Posted in Art, Books, Film, History, Libraries, Maps, Museums
Tagged Bodleian Library, Israel, Jerusalem, medieval manuscripts, Oxford
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Winter Fountains
What happens to public fountains during the winter? In many cities they are simply turned off until spring. But this year Philadelphia has come up with an imaginative way of using the fountains to brighten-up the dark months. Running from … Continue reading
Posted in Architecture, Art, Museums, Tech, Tourism, USA
Tagged Benjamin Franklin Parkway, Franklin Institute, LOVE Park, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Rodin Museum
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