vimarsana.com

Page 22 - ஸிந்ஸந்யாடீ கலை அருங்காட்சியகம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Covington s Frank Duveneck Gets His Due at the Cincinnati Art Museum

Cincinnati Magazine Cincinnati Art Museum’s current Frank Duveneck: American Masterretrospective would seem to have little need to dig up anything new about the esteemed Covington native. Born to German-immigrant parents, he and his career flowered in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and he’s often been called this city’s most important artist. A respected Art Academy of Cincinnati teacher as well, he died in 1919 at age 70. Illustration by Gabriel Ippoliti But, really, the ideas behind this show are anything but complacent. It attempts to shake the cobwebs off of Duveneck’s reputation, which isn’t as prominent nationally and internationally as it is here. As

Kelly Rectenwald Merges Chemistry and Anthropology as an Art Conservator

Cincinnati Magazine February 1, 2021 As the Cincinnati Art Museum’s Associate Objects Conservator, Kelly Rectenwald is in charge of repairing and preserving the museum’s three-dimensional objects so that they can be enjoyed by visitors for years to come. She discusses the value her job provides her and the community at large for our February 2021 “Cincinnati At Work” issue. Photograph by Devyn Glista How long have you been in this job and field of work? I’ve been the objects conservator at the Cincinnati Art Museum for seven years, and I’ve been in the field of conservation for more than 10.

Inside Our Cincinnati At Work Issue: February 2021 - Cincinnati Magazine

Cincinnati Magazine February 1, 2021 Three guests join us on this month’s episode to chat about our February 2021 cover package, The Value of Work: Editor-in-Chief John Fox discusses the main takeaways; Kelly Rectenwald describes her work as the Cincinnati Art Museum’s associate objects conservator; and Django Kroner talks about building custom treehouses with his company The Canopy Crew. Facebook Comments

The Final Home Designed by Mid-Century-Modern Icons Carl Strauss and Ray Roush Is Up for Sale

Photograph courtesy of Keller Williams Advisors Realty, David Smith It’s not often a house and its owners seem kindred spirits, but that really was the case for this structure and the couple who commissioned it in 1984 Harris and Alice Weston. He was an attorney and she, a photographer; together they were well known in this city as art collectors, arts patrons, and generous supporters of the Jewish community. Photograph courtesy of Keller Williams Advisors Realty, David Smith Set on a one-acre lot with sweeping Ohio River views, the contemporary home served as both a refuge and a place to entertain for the empty nesters, who worked and spent extensive time at arts and nonprofit organizations and events downtown. It was also the final project by Mid-Century-Modern icons Carl Strauss and Ray Roush as partners, and served as a home gallery for the Westons’ renowned art collections, with works by Dine, Kandinsky, and De Kooning (among countless others). Alice’s own photos of the

A closer look at Robert Duncanson, the Black landscape artist behind the inaugural painting presented to the Bidens

A closer look at Robert Duncanson, the Black landscape artist behind the inaugural painting presented to the Bidens
washingtonpost.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from washingtonpost.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

© 2025 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.