Your safety, and that of our team, continues to be our top priority, and we’re following procedures and guidelines laid out by the CDC and local health officials. We have new policies in place to ...
A practicing artist since the early 1980’s, Nancy Macko has had over 20 solo exhibitions and participated in over 140 group exhibitions. Originally from Long Island, New York, she received her ...
Born in 1962 in Zug (CH), Sabian Baumann studied visual arts from 1987 to 1991 at the University of the Arts in Zurich (CH) where s_he currently lives and works. Sabian Baumann’s oeuvre, which ...
Chitra Ganesh was born and raised in Brooklyn and Queens, and is currently based in Brooklyn. She completed her BA in Comparative Literature and Art—Semiotics from Brown University (1996), and her MFA ...
Our thematic lessons invite students to explore the Museum's collections and exhibitions—either in-person or virtually—through discussion, close looking, and creative expression, and to make ...
Guided tours cost $3 per student. Each group may include up to 25 students and 5 chaperones. The first 5 chaperones per group are free; the fee for additional chaperones is $5 each. Advance payment is ...
The correct spelling of this name is ROSANA CHOUTEAU. Rosana Chouteau was elected chief of the Osage Beaver Band, a clan of the Native American Osage Nation, in 1875, following the death of her uncle.
Lady Charlotte Guest translated the Mabinogion, a collection of medieval tales dealing with Celtic myths and legends, from Welsh into English in 1849. She took an interest in the local ironworks in ...
Christina, the sole heir to the estate and title of her father, King Gustav II Adolf of Sweden, became queen upon his death in 1632. However, until she reached majority, in 1644, the country was ruled ...
The Englishwoman Margery Jourdemain was first accused of witchcraft and arrested in 1432, but was released to the custody of her husband. Known as the Witch of Eye, she was again accused in 1441, this ...
The household in which Anne Cooke Bacon grew up was hailed by the Elizabethan intellectual Walter Haddon as a “small university.” Each of Anthony Cooke’s five daughters received a thorough humanist ...