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From The Nature of Horses exhibit. Deborah Butterfield captures the essence of the horse with her contemporary sculpture—characters of strength, spirit and grace. These start out as wooden pieces then taken apart and cast in bronze and put back together. Amazing. Denver Botanic Gardens

(at the Botanical Garden)

Nature: The Healing Power. An exhibition of photographs by Ramesh Kamath in The Gallery of the Arthur Smith Room of Christ Church Deer Park, Toronto. 8 May - 12 June 2011

Curated by Lenny Sydney Adler for the Barnard Library Zine Collection

This exhibit, installed on the occasion of the Barnard Center for Research on Women Scholar & Feminist Conference, "Movements: Politics, Performance and Disability," seeks to shed light on the voices of women living and working with disabilities-telling their stories via the D.I.Y. mythos of the personal, self-published zine. Featuring a range of pieces published within the past dozen or so years, each edition contextualizes the writer's view as related to the individual's experience in punk rock, feminism, queer culture, and film. Community care, motherhood, and the underpinnings of the medical industry are discussed. Women of color, size, and different economic backgrounds are represented. This exhibit is made up of zines from the Barnard Library Zine Collection archival and circulating collections.

 

Photo by Secil Cornick, Barnard Media Services

Museo Diocesano de Malolos

Barasoain Church Historical Complex

Malolos City, Bulacan, Philippines

8 May 2013

PROJECT:

Aggregations

 

PHOTO CREDIT:

James Harris?

 

Exhibit: Johnson Trading Gallery

Location: Design Miami/ 2008, Miami, Florida, USA

 

www.arandalasch.com

www.instagram.com/arandalasch

 

Exhibits at the Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) Museum in Washington. A corset.

UST Santissimo Rosario Parish Marian Exhibit, September 7, 2008

Exhibit with 640 baseballs representing the number of DUI arrests in Denver on July 4th holiday.

Exhibition curated by Sam Lubell and Greg Goldin, designed by Christian Wassmann, and on display Sep 17, 2017 - Feb 18, 2018 at the Queens Museum.

 

Westinghouse Pavilion by Eliot Noyes, 1964

Henson Exhibit @ The Museum of Science and Industry

As a kid, one of my favorite exhibits was the Footsteps Through Time exhibit in the Museum of Man. I loved seeing the ancestors and divergent paths that lead to the human species today, and the paths that no longer walk this Earth that could have been. I have my issues with the current Museum of Man. They removed this exhibit, now memorialized in a few brief frames. Their Egypt exhibit feels unorganized, misleading, and like an afterthought. They seem to be losing their solid focus on anthropology, and giving way to sensationalism. A museum has to make money to keep its doors open. But I still believe removing this exhibit was a mistake. I hope the museum returns to its roots and brings back this exhibit. I miss the primate hall and recreations. They fueled my interest in Anthropology, and increased my understanding of the human species.

Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director General, visited the Korean exhibit at the IAEA 66th General Conference held at the Agency headquarters in Vienna, Austria. 27 September 2022.

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

 

The Pontifical Exhibit: 'Peter & Patrimony' was opened to the 'City and to the World' on Sunday, February 22, 2015. Hundreds of parishioners and visitors toured the display on its opening day.

 

Some highlights of the Exhibition include the Papal Zucchetto (skull cap) and Pontifical Shoes of Pius XII, First, Second and Third Class Relics Pope Saint Pius X, Pontifical Missal of Pope Leo XIII, Pontifical 'Agnus Dei' Seals, as well as a Replica of the Papal Tiara of Urban VIII, often worn by Saint John XXIII.

 

This exhibit can be seen on Sunday mornings, after any of the Masses or by private arrangement. See www,cantius.org for more details

At the Norman Rockwel museum.

 

Title: Spring Exhibit photograph

Date: 1916

Description: This 1916 Spring Exhibit of Textiles and Clothing students' work, titled Original Designing from Plain Foundation Drafts, shows a wide range of basic garments, all in white, created at three-quarters the size of full-sized clothing.

Image ID: 12-10-Spring exhibit 1916.

 

This work has been identified as being free of known restrictions under U.S. copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights. The organization that has made this item available believes that the item is in the Public Domain under the laws of the United States, but a determination was not made as to its copyright status under the copyright laws of other countries. (CC Public Domain 1.0 and RightsStatements.org NoC-US 1.0). The original object is available at the Iowa State University Library Special Collections and University Archives (archives@iastate.edu). To request higher resolution reproductions of the original visit our website.

 

Braiding and photography by Shani Crowe. On display at Africa International House - June 10 - July 8 2016.

A Herman Miller Exhibition at the ArtScience Museum. Singapore. Exploring the life and work of Charles and Ray Eames. August 2013.

Exhibits at the IAEA 57th General Conference. IAEA Vienna, Austria. 17 September 2013.

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Governor Susana Martinez and Ideum Founder and Creative Director Jim Spadaccini cutting the ribbon marking the official opening of Ideum's new Exhibit Fabrication Studio in Corrales, NM, on August 20th, 2018. Also present (starting left): Secretary Mark Geisel, Senator John Sapien, Commissioner Jay Block, Governor Susana Martinez, Ideum Founder and Creative Director Jim Spadaccini, Representative Jane Powdrell-Culbert and Corrales MainStreet Executive Director Sandy Rasmussen. Behind: SEA president and CEO Steve Jenkins and Ideum CFO Angela Arzave. Not pictured: The Honorable Jo Anne Roake.

The Dalek Exhibit, located next to Ruth’s Chris Steak House in North Hills’ Main District, is a temporary public art installation designed by James Marshall.

 

Marshall, better known as Dalek, is an American painter, illustrator, photographer and muralist. Dalek’s present work is purely abstract and explores an abundance of flashing colors and multiple planes, as well as the push and pull dynamics of opposing forces—the play between rigidity and fluidity.

 

Dalek’s work is critically acclaimed and has been featured in numerous publications, articles and magazines such as The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, Juxtapoz and more.

A trippy exhibit featuring only blacklight-reactive, glow-in-the-dark or self-illuminating art.

 

The exhibit featured paintings, lit mirrors, as well as life-size dioramas (like the one shown here.)

exhibited at draakoni galerii, tallinn

PROJECT:

Aggregations

 

PHOTO CREDIT:

James Harris?

 

Exhibit: Johnson Trading Gallery

Location: Design Miami/ 2008, Miami, Florida, USA

 

www.arandalasch.com

www.instagram.com/arandalasch

 

The most thrilling event for me a couple of weeks ago was the discovery that the "temporary" fence in this section had finally been removed! Talk to any of the regulars, and i'd think you'd find that this was always their favourite spot at the elephant exhibit. But not when the temporary fence went up, keeping us further back (and the extra barriers made photography more difficult, and anyway the mudwallow here was allowed to dry up, and the drinks from the hose routine more or less stopped).

 

There were reasons for all the changes. But now the barrier is gone. The mudwallow here is being re-established, and the routine of the eles coming over to get a drink from the hose is starting up again. Yay!

 

Myself, i havent actually caught any of this mudwallow/hose action yet. I'm more likely to catch it in the afternoon. The eles and keepers are pretty much occupied in the mornings with their bath routines in the barn.

 

In this photo, there's keepers in this paddock, putting out food for the eles, so there's no eles in the area. Management of the elephants is now done with protected contact. Until a couple of months ago, as the eles were being trained for the changes required by protected contact management, the keepers could still go in with them when needed. And it meant that Thong Dee, Tang Mo and Luk could still be walked down to Gung's enclosure for his weekly visits from the girls. Mo has been much more cooperative with Gung on the last 2 occasions that she was in season. And Thong Dee is now up to the 5-year gap where they were looking to get her pregnant again, and she's Gung's favourite, and there's no problems when they get together. Sadly, neither of the girls is pregnant yet. And now that management is required to be fully protected contact, they can no longer be walked down to Gung. But never fear, they are getting a truck so they can travel there by truck.

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