Date Time
FSU’s Museum of Fine Arts announces guest lecture series
The Florida State University Museum of Fine Arts (MoFA) will host a series of guest lectures that will highlight speakers who utilize diverse approaches to their creative practice and lead discussions that are vital to the arts and the community.
Meredith Lynn, MoFA’s assistant curator and director of galleries, said that the museum is thrilled to bring these artists to the FSU community.
“Although they work across different media, Earlonne Woods, Nigel Poor, Hank Willis Thomas and Wendy Red Star have all illuminated historic and structural inequalities and shaped our ongoing conversations about the impacts of mass incarceration, colonialism and institutional racism,” Lynn said. “Our students are currently contending with these issues in their lives and in our classrooms, and it is our hope that these programs will inform and uplift the vital work happening in our community.”
We can put the Vermont Senator and former Presidential candidate anywhere we want with this wicked cool site called Bernie Sits. I could and have literally been doing this for hours now. I gets quite addicting and after all, a little bit of bundled-up Bernie everywhere is a good thing.
Wood Gaylor and American Modernism
HUNTINGTON, New York
Subject Line
Please provide verification code
Email is invalid
GAYLOR, (Samuel) Wood (American, 1883-1957) Arts Ball, 1918, 1918 Oil on canvas 27 x 45 in. (68.6 x 114.3) Private Collection
Heckscher Museum
On View January 23 to May 23, 2021, at The Hecksher Museum of Art
Scenes of festive revelers, clowns and performers and his fellow artists are the signature subject matter of Wood Gaylorâs raucous paintings.
Wood Gaylor and American Modernism includes two dozen artworks by Gaylor. The artwork is interspersed with paintings, sculptures, and drawings from The
Heckscher Museumâs collection representing artists that traveled in Gaylorâs social and artistic circles.Â
Obituary: Christopher P. Monkhouse
BRUNSWICK - Christopher P. Monkhouse, 73, the former chair of the European decorative arts department at the Art Institute of Chicago, .
Share
BRUNSWICK – Christopher P. Monkhouse, 73, the former chair of the European decorative arts department at the Art Institute of Chicago, died peacefully on Jan. 12, 2021 at Gosnell Memorial Hospice House, Scarborough. The cause of death was a stroke.
Born in Portland on April 2, 1947, Christopher was the son of William A. Monkhouse, M.D., and Agnes Pruyn Linder Monkhouse. He attended Waynflete School, graduated from Deerfield Academy in 1965, and in 1966 studied English country houses at Attingham Summer School, Shropshire, England.