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Udvar-Hazy Center opens May 5: here s a timeline of when 7 other facilities open in May John Gonzalez/7News
Udvar-Hazy Center opens May 5: here s a timeline of when 7 other facilities open in May UP NEXT
The Smithsonian has announced that eight of its facilities will again open to the public during May, including the National Zoo, home of the newest panda cub, 8-month-old Xiao Qi Ji.
The first to open is the Udvar-Hazy Center, part of the National Air and Space Museum in Chantilly, Virginia. It opens on May 5, which is a special day for the museum. May 5 is the 60th anniversary of the first U.S.-manned space flight by Alan Shepard. His Mercury capsule, Freedom 7, will be on display at the Udvar-Hazy Center for the first time.
The artist William T. Wiley in 1997 Jack Fulton
William T. Wiley, a beloved Bay Area artist and teacher and one of the founders of the Funk Art movement which included Peter Saul, Robert Arneson, Ed Kienholz, Bruce Conner, Jim Nutt and others has died, aged 83. His son Ethan Wiley confirmed to
that Wiley died from complications related to Parkinson’s disease, which the artist had lived with since 2014.
Wiley was born in Bedford, Indiana, in 1937. His father was a construction foreman who frequently moved the family around the country, and they ultimately settled in Washington State. In 1960 Wiley graduated from the California School of Fine Arts (now known as the San Francisco Art Institute), with a bachelor of fine arts degree and in 1962 earned his master of fine arts from the same institution.
Sam Whiting April 28, 2021Updated: April 28, 2021, 8:00 pm
Artist William Wiley is interviewed in 1996 at his Woodacre studio in Marin County. Photo: Jerry Telfer, The Chronicle 1996
William T. Wiley a founder of the Bay Area Funk art movement who expanded into every medium and style of creation from watercolor to printmaking to giant sculptures in a career that lasted from 1960 until just a few months ago died Sunday, April 25, at Marin General Hospital.
His death was due to complications from Parkinson’s disease, which he’d suffered from since 2014, said his son, Ethan Wiley. He was 83.
A painter with a unique style developed at an early age, Wiley had exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in 1960 when he was 23 and still an undergraduate at the San Francisco Art Institute. Since then, SFMOMA has come to own 50 of his pieces, with eight of them in mediums from ink on felt and leather to etching on paper on display in a designated gallery s